With the new season here, the
Cherries will be resplendent for the 2017-18 campaign in three
brand new playing strips. In an exclusive piece for Cherry Chimes, the club’s
very own kit expert Gareth Davies gives us his thoughts on Umbro’s first
endeavours.
JD Sports’ association with AFC Bournemouth
has been something that has always divided opinion. A second-rate kit supplier
to some, purveyors of pure brilliance to others. Whichever tendency your
opinion lent towards, they are, after nine seasons, no longer in charge of the
Dean Court kit cupboard.
It’s hard to believe that the first JD deal
was struck by the much-maligned Sport 6 group way back in 2008. Whilst Baker,
Savi and co were in charge, Bournemouth once again lurched from one crisis to
another, although two positive things they did do, ironically almost by
accident, was dispense with the hapless Jimmy Quinn and replace him with Eddie
Howe and also get JD on board.
The events of New Years Eve 2008 have of
course been well documented throughout our recent rise, but how the kit deal
came to fruition is a little bit more of a mystery, but to my best knowledge,
Sport 6 had actually agreed a deal in principal with Spanish supplier Joma, but
due to financial uncertainties, they pulled out at the eleventh hour. I
actually saw CAD drawings of what Joma designed for us and both kits were very
acceptable, but it wasn’t to be and we chose JD instead – or rather they were
the only option available.
Our first set of kits, due to the incredibly
short timescales involved, were the same as JD produced for Luton Town, just
with an altered colour scheme. They were nothing earth-shattering, but smart
and functional all the same. In total, JD produced 24 different sets of playing
attire for Bournemouth over nine years.
Sub-branded as Carbrini (twice), Fila and
then simply as JD for the last two seasons, they blessed with some of
Bournemouth’s best ever kits and very few failures either. From an aesthetic
point of view JD were, at times, virtually flawless, but it was perhaps in
other area’s where they were a real let down.
Supply issues were a constant cause for
discontent, whilst some supporters also claimed quality of products was a
problem too, although I never agreed with that particular notion. It was
obvious then, with the club now becoming an established force in the Premier
League, that when JD’s contract ran out in June that they wouldn’t be coming
back.
Attentions turned to who would replace them
and I know from speaking with the club that this process began way back in the
Summer of 2016. They explored various options, but finally settled on a five-year
deal with Umbro. If I’m being totally honest they weren’t my first choice as I
would have edged towards Under Armour or New Balance, but nevertheless, Umbro
are a very sound choice indeed and its reassuring to see a long-term deal in
place as well.
The partnership was announced with the
unveiling of a giant sand sculpture which was novel and innovative, clearly
demonstrating what a forward-thinking club we have become regarding major
announcements with the subsequent player unveilings of Defoe and Ake further adding
substance to that particular statement.
The biggest plus point to agreeing a deal
with someone like Umbro is that now supporters really feel the club are in
partnership with a proper kit supplier, opposed to a high street sports chain
that made kits almost as a side-line. Umbro quite rightly used the ‘Choice of
Champions’ tag line for many years after supplying England’s 1966 World Cup
winning team and since that halcyon day for English football, almost all the
top clubs in World football have been resplendent in kits carrying the iconic
diamonds at some point.
Sadly, Umbro were the victim of a
disastrous deal which saw the brand sold to Nike in 2008 and just four years
later, Nike announced that they wanted to concentrate on other areas of their
operation so all Umbro clubs and National Associations were transferred to Nike
and the future for the Cheshire based company was uncertain.
With clubs such as Manchester City and the
English National side now being forced to wear Nike’s dreadful generic
templates, Umbro were thankfully rescued by the Iconix Group and by 2014, were
back supplying Premier League clubs again in the shape of Everton. West Ham
followed suit a year later and with Bournemouth their latest acquisition, Umbro
start 2017-18 in partnership with three PL clubs. Not quite at the levels they
enjoyed 25 years ago when over half of the PL’s inaugural members were supplied
by Umbro, but refreshing to see the brand making real progress forward again.
In an industry dominated by templates and a
peculiar clamour for clubs to be supplied by either Nike, Puma or Adidas, the
Umbro deal with Bournemouth is both reassuring and refreshing, but have they
lived up to their hype?
Their first home kit production is blissfully
simple, which is entirely what I and many others expected from Umbro. Some have
said that the design doesn’t differ enough from 2016-17, but scratch the
surface and there are obvious changes. Whilst I loved last year’s collar and
buttons, we have now gone back to a rounded neck which is becoming the norm
within the industry now as retro seems to be creeping out of kit design a little,
although Umbro don’t appear to be using the mandate that the majority are
following.
Official AFCB photo. The new Umbro home kit. |
Whilst JD threw the kitchen sink at their
branding, Umbro are far more restrained and the discreet diamonds on both
sleeves make a refreshing change from those superfluous ‘iconic JD roundels’ - another
reminder that kit intricacies from days gone by are still considered an
important part of a kits make-up by Umbro.
The actual design is just so traditionally Bournemouth, and whilst I do agree that it’s similar to last years, without being
overly radical, updating such a unique arrangement like red and black stripes
year-on-year is a very tough ask. Discreet alterations rather than anything too
far-fetched is the best policy and that is something I am certain Umbro will
adopt for their next four home shirts and beyond, although I wouldn’t be averse
to at least one very left field design either.
The only downside perhaps is the sponsors
branding looking a little overbearing and fussy, although it does fit well with
the design so I’m not unduly worried about that and it seems, although there
has been no official confirmation from the club, that we won’t have a sleeve
sponsor this season either. The PL have of course finally allowed a secondary
sponsor on all playing kits, but haven’t enforced the rule of a solid back
panel for all striped kits as was erroneously reported by some twelve months
ago.
The away ensemble has somewhat surprisingly
split opinion as for me this is a real masterpiece and nestles itself nicely
within the very best change strips Bournemouth have ever worn [Ed-Cherry Chimes loves it!]. The blue shade
used is fresh and possibly lighter than those showcased by Bourne Red in 2003
and Scoreline in the late 80’s. The contrast of using a darker blue as a
secondary hue makes for a winning combination also.
Dickie Dowestt rendered in the same colours
as the kit has proved to be a controversial choice to some, but I like the
uniformity that this brings to a kit. It is an alternate combination after all,
so I have no problem whatsoever with something a little different. A red and
black crest would look odd in amongst the colours used, although we did use a
traditional crest on last year’s away shirt.
One facet to this shirt that makes it an
unmistakably Umbro production is the sublimated pattern printed into the main
body. Despite mentioning that retro is seemingly on the wane in football
fashion, Umbro have used it and to good effect within this particular offering.
I haven’t actually seen the shirt in the flesh yet, but the pattern looks
similar to that used within many early’90s Umbro kits and it appears to use
parts of our crest also. For those who think the home shirt is a little bit
plain and boring, well here is something a little more creative.
Given Umbro’s almost safety-first mantra
when designing a kit nowadays, I hadn’t held out an awful lot of hope for
something utterly bonkers for the third kit. If I had my way, it should be
compulsory for all kit suppliers to rip up the rule book with third kits, no
boundaries, the crazier the better.
There was of course the usual Bournemouth
clamour for green and black stripes, but I never have been and never will be a
fan of this combination. Also, I don’t consider one diving header- albeit a very
good diving header – as enough justification to use this design again. We did resurrect
it in the late ‘90s, but the players and then manager Mel Machin hated it so
much that part way through its second season of use, it was unceremoniously
ditched for all white.
White was never going to be on the agenda
this time round either as it’s a well-known fact that our manager isn’t a fan
of white kits. He must be endeared by the use of day-glow yellow though as for
the second year running, this retina scorching shade is contained within our
third kit palette.
Albeit a little toned down compared to last
years questionable ‘Ghost Green’ effort, I am still not a huge fan of any
colours like this being used in a football kit. One positive is that the kit is
predominately black though and the bright colour is merely a sidekick this time
round. I won’t admit to being a huge fan, but then it’s not unacceptable either
although it does have a training shirt look rather than an actual playing
jersey.
Overall though Umbro have left off where JD
did in the respect that they have produced bespoke and widely accepted playing
apparel for AFC Bournemouth. Whilst unfair to judge success on just one season
too, from the launch, to reveals, on sale dates and availability, Umbro seem to
be delivering and long may the improvement off the field keep apace with
on-field accomplishments at Dean Court too.
Gareth
is the author of ‘Shirt Tales’ which is returning to the match programme this
season after he wrote the ’30 Years On’ feature last season. You can follow
Gareth on Twitter: @garphied
Thanks to Gareth for sharing his great knowledge on not just Umbro but all the historic details of AFCB kits and the previous labels they have used.
Thanks to Gareth for sharing his great knowledge on not just Umbro but all the historic details of AFCB kits and the previous labels they have used.
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