logo
How Nigeria's 2018 shirt became the holy grail of modern football kit releases

How Nigeria's 2018 shirt became the holy grail of modern football kit releases

New York Times4 days ago

This article is part of our Kitted Out series, an exploration of the impact of soccer kits on culture and fashion.
Club teams and national teams from around the world release two, three and sometimes more football kits a year. Some clothing brands even add to the market by selling football-kit-inspired merchandise. So to make a shirt that stands out, that becomes iconic, means standing out from thousands of other creations and designs.
Advertisement
In 2018, ahead of the FIFA World Cup in Russia, designer Michael Wolff and Nike made a Nigeria home strip that went on to drive significant demand and became a modern trailblazer in the football kit market.
'It was probably the first football shirt to have this drop moment that transcended football,' Doug Bierton, CEO of Classic Football Shirts, tells The Athletic. 'It wasn't just Nigeria fans or even just football shirt enthusiasts who wanted it — it was something where everybody who became aware of it wanted one and a secondary market for that shirt was almost instantly created.
'It was the first football shirt that went straight over its RRP (recommended retail price) on launch. Prior to that, it was just sneakers doing that kind of thing.'
When the kit was released on June 1, 2018, lines wrapped around the block at Nike's London store, and it received three million pre-orders, according to the BBC, meaning it was sold out within minutes. The green and white home shirt was accompanied by other gear, including track jackets, bucket hats and shorts, which also rapidly sold out.
While it ended up appealing to the masses, being an international kit that people could get behind, for Wolff and Peter Hoppins, Nike senior design director from 2016 to 2020, the focus had to be on pleasing the Nigerian fans, players, and federation.
Nike's official media release described the kit as 'a tribute to Nigeria's 1994 debut on the world stage, the 2018 home kit features the traditional green torso, with the Super Eagles-inspired black-and-white sleeves. To modernise the jersey, the feather pattern has been abstracted and the colours updated, for a bold look on pitch'.
For Bierton, it was 'innovative and ahead of its time' as one of the first modern-era designs to directly reference the 90s, bringing that era's vibe in a forward-thinking way and evoking fan nostalgia. It was also nominated for the 2019 Beazley Designs of the Year award.
In previous years up to 2018, a darker green was used for Nigeria's home kit, but this was switched to the brighter, lighter green, along with white and black.
Advertisement
Hoppins told The Athletic's Brooks Peck in 2018: 'We said: 'OK, keep it traditional on one of the kits (the 2018 Nigeria away kit was a largely plain dark green design) and on the other one, just go all out.
'I've been looking back at some of the original designs and they were definitely not as full-on as where we landed. We just kept on pushing it. As we were doing this research in Nigeria and the culture, we were like: 'Just keep on pushing, pushing, pushing, pushing' and we eventually landed where we landed, and that kit really popped.'
Other countries would not stray far from tradition, but Nike and Nigeria were able to innovate and create a strip that defined the summer of 2018 and beyond.
'A lot of the clubs and federations are pretty old-school,' Hoppins said. 'They're run by… older… gentlemen, so it can be tough to explain why you want to do a bright green-and-white kit with feathers on it. We brought the players in with the president of the federation so they could almost, like, convince him that this was the thing to do. That was a little bit of a tactic on our part.'
Nigeria's 2018 release came as a new wave of talent fronted the national team, the youngest at the World Cup in Russia, with Alex Iwobi, Kelechi Iheanacho and Wilfred Ndidi all 21 years old at the time.
Sports marketer Desmond 'Dez' Ebohon from Southern Nigeria, Edo State, thinks that Nigeria have had hyped kits since their first World Cup in 1994 but described the 2018 edition as 'cultural and beautiful'.
As a shirt designed for a national team to wear, it couldn't simply stand on its own as a striking holy-grail design for kit enthusiasts — it also had to embody the identity of one of West Africa's biggest sides.
'It feels the kit providers try their best for Nigeria to deliver a crazy kit,' Ebohon tells The Athletic, 'one that incorporates culture, the vibes, the colourfulness and joy that Nigerians bring to football, and we appreciate that.'
The chevron-esque patterns on the shirt remind Ebohon of Adire, a type of resist-dyed cloth and a Yoruba word which translates to 'tie and dye'.
This kit put an exclamation point on the increased demand for football shirts in the late 2010s that has helped boost the second-hand market in particular, as football fans and casuals alike wore shirts that reflected their personality and identity — and, bottom line, to look cool.
Even still, it is rare for shirts to sell out and be higher than their RRP the following week. Brierton says the most sought-after kits can sell out in the period after Christmas to the end of the season, and then increase in value. For example, Ajax's 2021-22 'Three Little Birds' third shirt. Through Classic Football Shirts, the Nigeria 2018 home kit typically sells for at least double its RRP (£64.95, $88.35) in excellent condition.
Advertisement
But not every shirt can be a cult classic, nor should every shirt try to be one.
'The way it's going, maybe it is a bit overdone and every brand, every team trying to have a Nigeria moment is not sustainable. It has to be organic,' Brierton says.
'There's a limited space for very bright, lime green, bold design. You would think: 'Oh, that's a small subsection of people who have got the balls to wear that type of shirt'. I don't think that type of shirt could win every year, but it did that year, in that moment.'
Frequent football-shirt leaks mean the surprise factor on bold designs can also take the sting out of launches.
Respective fans, though, have their own styles and kits can remind them of different players and memories, so value is in the eye of the beholder and can vary from person to person.
At the 2018 World Cup, the Super Eagles fell in the group stage despite having the most desirable kit around.
'The game against Iceland,' says Ebohon as he recalls his best memories of his team in their famous strip. '(Ahmed) Musa scored two goals. It was a great win because Iceland went very far in the 2016 Euros and knocked out England.
'When the World Cup came, people were saying 'giant-killers' Iceland, with Argentina and Croatia (were in Nigeria's group), so it got me scared a bit. When we beat them, I said: 'They are not giant killers' — it was just England being bad.
'I would say the Argentina game, Musa also scored but (Lionel) Messi being Messi broke our hearts in the end.'
(Illustration: Demetrius Robinson/The Athletic;)
Kitted Out is part of a partnership with VW Tiguan. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Report: Nets expressing 'particular' interest in BYU G Egor Demin
Report: Nets expressing 'particular' interest in BYU G Egor Demin

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Report: Nets expressing 'particular' interest in BYU G Egor Demin

The Brooklyn Nets have five picks to use in the upcoming 2025 NBA Draft that begins on Wednesday at Barclays Center, the home of the Nets. Brooklyn may not use all of their picks to take players in this class, but they are closing in on players they're interested in, including a player with some upside. "We've heard consistent buzz that he is drawing particular interest from Brooklyn," NBA insider Jake Fischer wrote (h/t Rookie Wire's Cody Taylor) in his article for The Stein Line while explaining why BYU guard Egor Demin seems to be underrated. Demin's college coach, former NBA assistant Kevin Young, had some praise for his former player as Demin looks to take his game to next level, potentially to the Nets. Advertisement "Many front offices appear intrigued by the talent that complements Demin's lengthy frame," Fischer continued while relaying what most front offices think of Demin. "It is no stretch to say that he is the highest-rated NBA Draft prospect with Real Madrid in his background since a certain Doncic." Demin, 19, is one of the more interesting prospects in the draft given the way that he could fit multiple positions because of his size and potential shooting ability. Demin, listed at 6-foot-8 and 200 pounds, is coming off a 2024-25 season in which the Russian averaged 10.6 points, 3.9 rebounds, 5.5 assists, and 1.2 steals per game while shooting 41.2% from the field and 27.3% from three-point land. "Egor Demin will earn consideration from late-lottery teams that buy the playmaking and are willing to bet on his shooting development," Jonathan Wasserman wrote of Demin in his latest mock draft for Bleacher Report. Wasserman has being taken by the Minnesota Timberwolves with the 17th overall pick in the draft, two picks before the Nets could potentially take him. At the moment, it seems that Demin's main appeal to teams is his ability to make plays for himself and others along with his ability to use his size to get to the rim against his defender. Demin's shooting is a work-in-progress, but if he is able to make significant improvements in that department, he could be the kind of steal that Brooklyn is hoping for. This article originally appeared on Nets Wire: Report: Nets expressing 'particular' interest in BYU G Egor Demin

That Terrifying Chant in '28 Years Later': Danny Boyle Explains How a 110-Year-Old Recording Came to Define the Film
That Terrifying Chant in '28 Years Later': Danny Boyle Explains How a 110-Year-Old Recording Came to Define the Film

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

That Terrifying Chant in '28 Years Later': Danny Boyle Explains How a 110-Year-Old Recording Came to Define the Film

When the first trailer arrived for '28 Years Later,' the third installment in Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's masterful '28 Days Later' series of horror films, it was scary, filled with gruesome images of zombies and a dystopian world. But what makes the trailer even more terrifying is an eerie, rhythmic chant by a high, nasal voice, moving with a military cadence, monotonal at first but growing increasingly louder and more agitated as it goes on, with the images and ominous musical backdrop growing in speed and intensity as it progresses. More from Variety Box Office: '28 Years Later' Debuts to $5.8 Million, 'Elio' Flies to $3 Million in Thursday Previews Danny Boyle Says He Could Not Make 'Slumdog Millionaire' Today Due to 'Cultural Appropriation' and 'That's How It Should Be': 'I'd Want a Young Indian Filmmaker to Shoot It' '28 Years Later' Duo Danny Boyle and Alex Garland Break Down That Cliffhanger, the Next Two Movies and the Studio's Reaction to Extreme Gore and Nudity Somehow, in that context, the chant, even though the words seem unrelated to the images, is absolutely horrifying, like a deranged rap song. Its use in the film makes an ominous scene even more ominous. The chant is actually 'Boots,' a poem by Rudyard Kipling, first published in 1903 and intended to convey the maddening monotony of soldiers marching; the direct inspiration was the hundreds of miles British soldiers were forced to march across southern Africa in the Second Boer War around the turn of the last century, according to the Kipling Society. The recording used in the film is nearly as old as the poem itself, voiced in 1915 by actor Taylor Holmes. It is a dramatic reading that starts off militaristic as the initial lines set the scene, but his voice is patently hysterical by the end, even as it follows the lock-step rhythm of the first five syllables: 'I—have—marched—six—weeks in hell and certifyIt—is—not—fire—devils, dark, or anything,But boots—boots—boots—boots—movin' up and down again,And there's no discharge in the war!Try—try—try—try—to think of something differentOh—my—God—keep—me from going lunatic!' Unusually for something featured so prominently in a trailer, the poem plays a very small, although foreboding, role in the film — buttressed with an eerie bass synthesizer, it soundtracks Spike and his father walking to the mainland, which is thick with infected zombies, and presumably conveys that they're marching to war. But out of everything that could have been used to deliver that message, why a 110-year-old recording of a poem that dates back to the peak of the British Empire? Boyle explained in an interview with Variety last week. 'We had all these archives that we wanted to use to suggest the culture that the island was teaching its children,' he says. 'It was very much a regressive thing — they were looking back to a time when England was great. 'It's very much linked to Shakespeare,' he continues. 'For those who know the 'Henry the Fifth' film, there's a very famous speech, the Saint Crispin's Day speech, which is about the noble heroic English beating the French with their bows and arrows. We were searching for a song, for a hymn — for a speech, actually. We did think about using the Crispin's Day speech at one point, but that felt too on the nose. 'And then we watched the trailer — Alex and I remember it vividly — the first trailer that Sony sent us, and there was this [recording] on it, and we were like, 'Fucking hell!' It was startling in its power. It was used very effectively. 'The trailer is a very good trailer, but there was something more than that about that [recording], about that tune, about that poem. And we tried it in our archive sequence, and it was like it was made for. it' A rep for Sony wasn't immediately able to pinpoint the person who chose the chant for that trailer, but it was so effective that Boyle was quick to incorporate it into the film. 'It's like a reverse osmosis,' he says. 'It came into the film and seemed to make sense of so much of what we've been trying to reach for.' He also notes that Kipling's words and Holmes' voice, echoing across the decades in a context neither ever could have imagined, somehow take on a new power in today's context. 'You have to hold your hand up and say, 'How is it that something that's recorded over 100 years ago has that same visceral power that it's always intended to have?' And I think it was always intended to have that power and it still maintains it. In a TikTok world, it still has that impact. It's amazing.' Additional reporting by Bill Earl. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar

U.S. rejects visas for Senegal women's national basketball team members, staff
U.S. rejects visas for Senegal women's national basketball team members, staff

New York Times

time9 hours ago

  • New York Times

U.S. rejects visas for Senegal women's national basketball team members, staff

The Senegal women's national basketball team cancelled a 10-day training camp in the U.S. from June 22 to July 3 after the U.S. rejected visas for five players, six staff members and a ministerial delegation, the Senegalese Basketball Federation announced in a statement Friday. The rejected visas come weeks after the Trump administration announced a travel ban on 12 countries and visa restrictions on another seven. That original group did not include Senegal, but The Washington Post and other outlets reported last week that the administration was considering expanding the ban to 36 more countries, including Senegal. The expanded ban has not yet taken effect. Advertisement The travel ban includes exemptions for the World Cup, Olympics and any 'other major sporting event,' though it's unclear what constitutes a 'major' event. 'Informed of the refusal to issue Visas to multiple members of the national women's basketball team of Senegal, I gave instruction to the Ministry of Sports to cancel, purely and simply, the ten-day preparation program initially set to be in the United States of America,' Senegal Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko said in a statement on Facebook on Friday. The U.S. State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The training camp, which will now take place in Senegal, is in preparation for the Women's AfroBasket, Africa's continental championship. Senegal leads the medal table and has won 11 titles, the most in Women's AfroBasket history. Sonko also praised China in his statement on Friday. With the Trump administration pulling foreign assistance and restricting travel from many African countries, some foreign policy experts predict that China will strengthen its relationship with the continent and fill that gap. 'I would like to express my profound gratitude to the People's Republic of China, who have agreed to several tens of grants for the preparation of our athletes along with their supervisors, with the Youth Olympic Games in Dakar 2026 in mind,' Sonko said. The Athletic's Max Mathews contributed reporting.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store