The unusual reason a Concacaf team won’t release shirts at the World Cup

Qatar 2022

According to reports, one of Concacaf’s top teams will not be releasing new clothes at Qatar 2022 due to a lack of trust in their association.

Qatar 2022: The unusual reason a Concacaf side won't make their World Cup jersey debut.
© GettyQatar 2022: The unusual reason a Concacaf side won’t make their World Cup jersey debut.

The Qatar World Cup approximate. 89 days from the start of the sporting event which paralyzes the world despite the controversies surrounding its development, the climate of the World Cup permeates the daily lives of those who do not like football. Effervescence which crystallizes, for example, in the obsession with panini albumthe presence of Concacaf countries in the ranking of the most tickets sold or the anguish of knowing the new team kits.

This last subject, precisely, is the one that questions Canada. It’s been 36 years since the last time Reds They qualified for a World Cup, a feat they accomplished as the best team in the qualifying rounds. John Herdman, coach of the women’s team that won two bronze medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics, continued his successful legacy in the men’s branch by guiding one of the best generations the team has ever had. . So the illusion is on the surface in the hobby.

However, the World Cup debut of stars like Alphonso Davis, Jonathan David, Atiba Hutchinson, Cyle Larin, Tajon Buchanan or Stephen Eustaquio will be marked by a particular detail. As reported by Canadian soccer pundit Duane Rollins: “Canada will not have new uniforms for the World Cup”. That’s because the Canadian Soccer Association (CSA) hadn’t expected the team to qualify two years ago when they were supposed to start planning the new kit.

No doubts, displaying new shirts at the World Cup is a tradition. And teams like Argentina, Mexico, England, Spain or Ghana have already presented theirs. But it follows interesting dilemmawhich is more linked to the clubs due to the frequency with which they renew their uniforms, and has two fundamental legs: the economic (fans can’t always afford them) and the environmental (the pollution generated by the mass production of clothing). A policy that has been put in place, for example, by Brentford of the English Premier League by not changing their starting shirt in two seasons.

Alvin Nguyen

"Amateur introvert. Pop culture trailblazer. Incurable bacon aficionado."

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