A Look Back at Liverpool’s Best Change Kit From Each Supplier
After picking the best home offerings from each of the five kit makers Liverpool have had over the years, today we look back at some away and third kits.
With no football to be played, we’re taking the chance to talk a bit of kit this week with the recent leaks of next season’s Nike offerings fresh in our memory having us thinking of some of the best and worst Liverpool have worn over the years.
Last time out, we took a gander through the years of Liverpool home kits. Spoiler: they were all red. Still, even sticking to a mostly red (and a little bit of white) palate there was a lot of variation and a lot of potential options to choose from. Nothing like the options available when we start digging into the change kits, though.
Here, then, are our favourites from each kit manufacturer. Take a look and then let us know if we missed your obvious, obviously best, pick.
Adidas 2011-12 Away
Almost any Adidas away kit from the 80s could have been here, and the yellow Crown Paints kit and grey Candy kit are genuine club classics. We’re looking to Adidas’ second run for our pick, though, and a lot of that is probably down to some of their misfires from that period making their bangers stand out just a little bit more. And of said bangers, none more bangered than the 2011-12 charcoal away kit. It was Adidas’ final year making Liverpool’s kit, and while their home offering was bland and their third was a stomach-churning white and blue with a weird-ass shoulder slash number, that away kit. Well. In a year the Reds failed to hold on to the momentum brought by FSG and Kenny Dalglish mid-way through the season before and slumped to eighth, there were times that charcoal grey kit with red detailing and subtle white pinstripes was the best thing going for them.
Photo by John Powell/Liverpool FC via Getty ImagesWarrior 2014-15 Third
Warrior consistently gave Liverpool some of the worst kits in the club’s history, and their change kits were especially egregious—that 2012-13 diving suit, the obsession with tribal patterns, the weird attempts at colour blocking. Somehow, though, they also quietly put out one of the best change kits the club have ever had, a rather unusual nod to South American kits with grey and black hoops overlaid by a red and black sash. It sounds a little busy, but it just worked. Unlike so many of their other attempts to play around or think outside the box. So of course it then felt like Liverpool never actually wore the damn thing.
Photo by John Powell/Liverpool FC via Getty ImagesReebok 1998-99 Away
A lot of what Reebok tried in the 90s didn’t quite come off, but they did at least help to revive the white shirt, black shorts combo back as a proper Liverpool away staple thanks to three variations on the theme over the years—a theme that had largely been absent for two decades after being the club’s go-to away look for much of their history before then. And of the options, we’re going with their first and most classic take on the look, clean and—rather disconcertingly from a modern perspective—weighty and billowing in all its late-90s glory. The collar, the thick stripes, and the slightly tweaked badge. It all just works.
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Umbro 1981-1984 Away
Crown Paints. Pinstripes. Fat Collars. Yellow. Picture a Liverpool away kit in your mind and there’s a decent chance it’s this one, and it’s probably being worn by Kenny Dalglish with his arms raised in triumph. It’s the obvious choice. It’s the only choice.
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New Balance 2018-19 Away
New Balance deserve a lot of credit for dialling back the sartorial excesses of the Warrior years and introducing a darker shade of red for the home kit, but they still played around a little with the alternates. Sometimes that paid off and sometimes, well, it ended up a neon green monstrosity. In 2018-19 it really, really worked. If you told people you wanted to do a purple and orange Liverpool kit, nobody would imagine it could look good. And yet it did. Somehow. For many Liverpool fans, it was the best change kit the club had since Adidas’ charcoal number that ended their run with the Reds and kicked off our list here today.
Photo by John Powell/Liverpool FC via Getty ImagesSource: liverpooloffside.sbnation.com
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