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FourFourTwo
FourFourTwo
Sport
Tom Hancock

Great goalkeeper kits

Mexico goalkeeper Jorge Campos in action at the 1994 World Cup.

One of the great advantages of being a goalkeeper is that you get to wear a different kit to all your teammates.

From the slick to the bold, we've picked out some of the finest threads ever worn by those in gloves.

Read on to find out which strips made the cut (we make no apologies for the 90s featuring in a big way).

Iker Casillas was the third goalkeeper to captain a team to World Cup glory, and the legendary Spain custodian did it while looking very sharp indeed.

As La Roja defeated the Netherlands in the 2010 final, Casillas wore this straightforward green and black number featuring Adidas sleeve stripes in the colours of the Spanish flag – and he kept it on to lift the trophy.

Where did Tim Howard go?! I can’t see him; can you?

Ok, so Everton’s camouflage ‘keeper kit for the 2011/12 season didn’t quite make their number one invisible to opposition strikers (although the Toffees did only concede 40 league goals that campaign), but it has to go down as one of the more creative designs of the modern Premier League era.

The Admiral shield is seldom seen on top-level kits these days, but the long-running English manufacturer produced some seriously snazzy shirts for big clubs during the latter part of the 20th century.

In the Premier League’s inaugural campaign of 1992/93, Leeds goalie John Lukic wore this typically 90s jersey as the Yorkshire side tried (but ultimately failed miserably – they finished 17th) to defend their crown as champions of England.

There’s something of a jester vibe to Dundee’s 2024/25 goalkeeper strips – especially the pink and white one pictured – but we're not joking when we say we’re big fans.

Produced by Italian brand Macron, the above top and its light blue counterpart – bearing the same pattern – complete a slick line-up of threads for the Scottish outfit.

The Netherlands’ outfit shirt in which they won Euro 1988 might just be the greatest of all time – and the Oranje had a pretty good goalie top to go with it.

Keeper Hans van Breukelen looked smart in diagonal blue stripes thanks to an Adidas template which he also wore for club side PSV.

Bayern Munich goalkeeping great Oliver Kahn was nicknamed ‘Vol-kahn-o’ (geddit?) – and in the 1997/98 campaign, he rocked this suitably geological get-up.

A custom design rather than the usual templated fare served up by Adidas, it was worn by Kahn during a campaign which saw Bayern win the DFB-Pokal (German Cup).

In the early days, before they became synonymous with black and white striped shirts, Juventus wore pink and black.

One of their 2002/03 goalkeeper kits (the other was the same but in grey) – donned by the legendary Gianluigi Buffon – paid homage to this, using a template which made you appear absolutely ripped even if you weren’t.

Paraguay’s Jose Chilavert is one of the most iconic ‘keepers ever to play the game – not least for his ridiculous goalscoring exploits – and he got to step out in some striking strips over the years.

This one, which ‘El Buldog’ wore at the 1997 Copa America, was all sorts of funky and could only possibly be from that decade.

Featuring colourful constellations and a football rocketing into outer space, Australia’s 1997-1998 goalkeeper top is as wild as they come.

Ex-Aston Villa and Manchester United man Mark Bosnich got to model it as the Socceroos came agonisingly close to qualifying for their first World Cup in 24 years, losing on away goals to Iran in a play-off.

The inimitable Neville Southall was a force to be reckoned with in any colour – and there was certainly no missing Big Nev in this bright pink, yellow, green and blue get-up.

Rocked with style by the legendary Everton custodian towards the end of his international career with Wales, it was among a number of garishly great Umbro designs to appear during the 90s.

Le Coq Sportif produced a very smart selection of strips for Argentina’s victorious 1986 World Cup campaign, including the kit worn by number one Nery Pumpido (who actually wore the number 18 shirt, owing to the Argentines’ unusual decision to allocate numbers alphabetically by surname).

Grey doesn’t have to be dull at all, as demonstrated by this delightfully patterned two-tone design.

Maroon, black and orange: it’s a colour combination that just doesn’t sound like it should work – then you see a picture of Germany skipper Oliver Kahn at the 2002 World Cup and realise that the three shades complement each other superbly.

Kahn donned this simple yet very aesthetically pleasing number – as well as its blue equivalent – in captaining the Germans to their first World Cup final since reunification.

Everyone loves Croatia’s checkerboard shirts, right? How could you not? They’re one of the most iconic in the international game.

And at the country’s debut World Cup of 1998, ‘keeper Drazen Ladic was attired almost as stylishly, thanks to this snazzy yellow and blue number – of which there was also a navy and blue version.

Much like Croatia, Sampdoria are one of the most instantly recognisable teams in world football thanks to their unique shirt design.

In the late 00s, the famed Italian club extended their distinctive stripes from their outfield strip to the tops worn by their goalies – and they didn’t miss with it for a good four years, which we just love to see.

Liverpool’s home shirt for the 1989/90 and 1990/91 seasons remains an absolute classic, thanks to the tasteful pattern woven into the fabric and that iconic sponsor: Italian domestic appliance manufacturer Candy.

And legendarily bonkers number one Bruce Grobbelaar didn’t miss out: his jersey was the same but in that most traditional of goalkeeping colours: green.

In 2011, France unveiled a white and blue hooped away shirt – undoubtedly different but arguably a bit too rugby-like for football.

The same pattern on their goalkeeper kits worked wonderfully, however, and Les Bleus’ goalkeepers looked thoroughly stylish whether wearing the black and grey variant pictured or the red and maroon one.

The years immediately following the heartache of Italia ’90 weren’t great for England: the Three Lions endured a miserable Euro 92 campaign then failed to qualify for the 1994 World Cup.

They did have some fantastic goalkeeper kits to soften the blow somewhat, though: two wavy-patterned numbers in blue (pictured) and yellow – which even featured elbow pads in the shape of the Umbro logo.

One of the strips in which Peter Schmeichel helped Manchester United to an historic treble in the 1998/99 season, this green ‘fit is a classic of the Premier League era.

Understated yet still pleasingly 90s, it came with something which you just don’t see on footy shirts these days: a zip!

A slightly mad jersey for a thoroughly mad ‘keeper, this strip for Colombia’s 1990 World Cup campaign is a bit of a work of art.

Worn by unmistakable kamikaze custodian Rene Higuita, it went perfectly with the South American country’s outfield shirts for that tournament – which were also instant classics.

Look at Tim Flowers’ face in that photo: the Blackburn number one was obviously absolutely ecstatic about playing in this kit.

Evoking feelings of Tetris and Tooty Frooties in equal measure, this Asics effort graced the pitch as Rovers finished as Premier League runners-up to Manchester United a year before claiming the title themselves.

Black and grey yet also, in its own way, loud, Arsenal’s first-choice 1994/95 goalie jersey oozed… star quality.

David Seaman was the number one as the Gunners reached the Cup Winners’ Cup final under caretaker boss Stewart Houston (although for the sake of their fans, we’ll refrain from mentioning what happened to Seaman that night in Paris).

Norwich unashamedly threw it back to the 90s with their ‘keeper kits for the 2024/25 campaign, and this rainbow-infused effort is the best of them.

On a strip produced by Spanish brand Joma, the altering of the club badge from green and yellow to black and white allows for maximum, colour-bursting contrast.

We can only imagine that opposing forwards found it rather distracting to play against Yokohama F. Marinos during the 1996 season: we’d certainly have struggled to look anywhere but straight at goalkeeper Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi.

The legendary Japanese shot-stopper took to the pitch in this outrageously snazzy number by native manufacturer Mizuno.

For many years, Brazil’s goalkeepers were especially obvious: they wore tops bearing the nation’s name in great big letters across the front.

That all ended at the start of the 90s, but Claudio Taffarel got to rock retro look (well, it is now) one last time at the 1990 World Cup – in a smart collared jersey from South American supplier Topper.

Bristol City have shown off some truly sensational goalie kits in recent years, and we particularly rate this colourful feathered design.

Made by Irish sportswear company O’Neills – who have a bit of a knack for producing such snazziness – and giving a decidedly tropical vibe, it was used by the Robins for two seasons.

Grey with a blue collar and sleeve cuffs to match the shade of the Azzurri’s outfield shirts, Italy’s 1982 World Cup goalkeeper jersey was a simple yet stunning classic which has stood the test of them.

It was donned by immense captain Dino Zoff, who, aged 40, became the oldest World Cup winner in history that summer in Spain.

The brainchild of goalkeeping coach Barry Richardson, Wycombe’s main 2017/18 goalie top was a kaleidoscopic masterpiece.

It didn’t quit have the (supposed) intended effect of putting off the other team’s attackers – Wanderers number one Scott Brown conceded 15 goals in his first five games wearing it – but the Buckinghamshire outfit did win promotion from League Two that term, so…

We’re ranking this as the greatest goalkeeper kit in Premier League history – come on, just look at it!

Adidas made these city-specific jerseys for a number of clubs – Scottish giants Rangers also got one – but Newcastle, with a little help from the Tyneside skyline, had the best of the bunch in our view.

Still considered by many to be the finest ‘keeper of all time, Lev Yashin was known as the ‘Black Panther’ or ‘Black Spider’ – such was his propensity for lining up between the sticks dressed in all bla…

Actually, it was a very dark blue – but that doesn’t ultimately matter: whether playing for Dynamo Moscow or the Soviet Union national team, Yashin made the look his own, and no one else will ever be able to pull it off quite as well.

A brilliantly eccentric goalkeeper, Mexican great Jorge Campos reflected his personality in his garish self-designed strips.

Capped 129 times by his country, Campos featured at the 1994 and 1998 World Cups – and it was at the first of those that he showed off this ‘fit, gloriously patterned right down to the shorts.

Does Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi know how lucky he was as a player? Some of the kits he had the chance to pull on for both club and country were just next level.

At the 1998 World Cup in France, he was pure fire emoji (not that emojis were invented until the following year – by a Japanese artist, Shigetaka Kurita, in fact – but if they had been…).

Plain black and wonderfully rainbow-ish at the same time, this classic Denmark goalie top goes down as the best of all time (in FourFourTwo’s humble opinion).

Not that it would have mattered what Peter Schmeichel played in as the Danes wrote one of football’s great underdog stories by winning Euro 92 as last-minute entrants, but we reckon that triumphant campaign was made all the more memorable by this piece of Hummel perfection.

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