in

Tottenham’s new 2020-21 home shirt leaked online… but fans are not happy and brand it ‘horrific’


TOTTENHAM’S home kit for next season has been leaked online and fans have branded it “horrific”.

Spurs switched from Under Armour to Nike in 2017 and enter their fourth season with the manufacturer next term.

 Tottenham’s home kit for next season has been leaked online

Tottenham’s home kit for next season has been leaked online

FootyHeadlines, who have a track record of revealing new kits before official release, shared the apparent home jersey for Tottenham’s 2020-21 season.

But fans have not reacted well to their potential new design and are left praying the away kit is more pleasant on the eye.

One said: “If this is our home kit, I’ll wait for the away kit thanks.”

Another said: “Beyond disgusting.”

Nike are ditching their football kit templates for next season with Chelsea, Tottenham and Liverpool among the teams affected.

The American giants were widely criticised for some of their “boring” instalments over the last few season but it appears Premier League fans can expect something much different next season.

Whether they are a hit with fans remains to be seen however, with the early signs from Spurs far from promising.

TICK-SHOCK

Brighton, Chelsea and Spurs currently sport the famous Nike swoosh on their chests with Prem champions in waiting Liverpool signed up for the next campaign.

After criticism, Nike’s senior director of global communications Heidi Burgett confirmed each team would have their own unique design for 2020-21.

She tweeted: “We’re ditching the templates.

“For the 2020 kits, Nike designers had 65 chassis options available to them across varying necklines, sleeves, cuffs, badge placement, etc.

“From hand-drawn prints to custom fonts, each team’s look will be its own.”

Bizarre moment Lacazette gets Arsenal pal Joe Willock to sniff his fingers as TV cameras turn to bench


Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk


Tagcloud:

Giani hails perfect 10 as Modena keep up the chase

Kevin De Bruyne could lose out on up to £2.5m in add-ons after Man City’s Champions League ban by Uefa