

Everything about it is great, from the subtle but effective piping on both the shirt and the shorts, the background design on the body of the shirt, which has a retro 1980s feel without being a direct copy of something from the past, to the fact it’s essentially a mirror of the home shirt colours-wise.Ĭastore has served up quite a few designs in their relatively young kit-producing life that essentially amount to a shrug in polyester form but this is top drawer. The bronze logos on the chest and the Escher-esque patterns on the main body make things a bit more interesting but it still looks like the sort of thing a bloke who owns a collection of personalised nunchucks might wear. In this case, Arsenal have gone for… grey Adidas stripes, which are pretty dull.
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If you’re going to have a black kit - and the jury remains out as to whether they’re a wise choice - then you either have to go the full blackout route, which retains a sense of cool, or have a proper contrast colour for the detail. Introducing The Arsenal x 22/23 Away Kit 😎 Read on then, to discover who got things right, who got things wrong and who got the first ever zero out of 10 rating in our long and illustrious kit-rating history… But it can also be very bad: experimentation for experimentation’s sake, the overcomplicating of what should be a relatively straightforward process. This can be good, providing a useful space for experimentation and breaking norms. The change strips are usually the place where kit designers have their fun, try a few things out, maybe get a little bit wacky.

Or when someone has a word and points out they haven’t worn the away shirt in a while, so they had better wear it when there are no clashes at all. You have lapped up The Athletic’s solemn verdict on the 2022-23 season’s Premier League home shirts, so now it’s time to take a look at the jerseys the country’s top 20 teams will be wearing when there are colour clashes.
