is it just me or anyone else notice too that so far, we win when we used red jersey and lost when we use blue one? :|
Fuck Nike and their Shitty Red jerseys...we shouldn't be playing in Red, just like Bilan shouldn't play in Blue. there's no reason for it...almost any other color would be ok. whats wrong with Gold? White?
how will having red shirts build us a new stadium?The Gold and the white don't build us a stadium.
how will having red shirts build us a new stadium?
how will having red shirts build us a new stadium?
this is pretty much how i feelThe question here is not whether the jersey looks good or bad
Or weather it's orange or red
Or whether it would sell well or not
Or whether the stadium will come
It's called PRIDE & HONOR. Wearing the color of our city rival is just an absolute disgrace. Nothing should be able to justify it. Football is more than mathematics for me. I can understand if wearing red is just for commercial purpose, and it seems to be doing well; but I will never accept it since we are basically selling our soul to the devil.
while i strongly dislike that shirt because it's the St Georges cross, its not a problem because Inter don't have the Scottish loyalties i doIf there should be red I'd be very happy If we dug out 07/08 away kit with the red cross.
while i strongly dislike that shirt because it's the St Georges cross, its not a problem because Inter don't have the Scottish loyalties i do
i liked the kit with the Dragon, or the Third kit that we used in CL 04?
i think that the current away kit with the red changed to white would make a cracking kit
Some historians believe that the St George's Cross was adopted from the flag of Genoa, which dates back to 1096. The Genoese flag was adopted from the personal flag of St. Ambrose, the 4th century Bishop of Milan who was a key figure in the development of Christianity in the West. St. Ambrose's cross had become a symbol of Milan, then the wider areas of Northern Italy. (Because it was a common symbol in the region, it was the flag of the Lombard League, a coalition of city states including both Milan and Genoa that opposed Frederick Barbarossa in the 12th and 13th Century.) Genoa's patron saint was St. George, and its vast trading fleet carried the association between the flag and the Saint across the ports of Europe and the Mediterranean Sea.
Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, supports this theory:
"The St. George's flag, a red cross on a white field, was adopted by England and the City of London in 1190 for their ships entering the Mediterranean to benefit from the protection of the Geonoese fleet. The English Monarch paid an annual tribute to the Doge of Genoa for this privilege."[3]
The Gold and the white don't build us a stadium.