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Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Why do the British and Irish Lions wear red jerseys?
The British and Irish Lions have worn their traditional kit of red jerseys, white shorts and blue socks with a green turnover at the top on every tour since 1950. The colours were chosen in order to represent the unity of the four rugby nations which make up the Lions - England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Advertisement Prior to 1950, the Lions had worn kits of various different designs, all featuring the colours red, white, and blue. The first Lions kit in 1888 featured blue and red horizontal stripes on a white shirt, with white shorts and blue socks. That was followed by a variety of similar designs until 1910, when the team adopted a kit made up of a dark blue jersey with white collar, white shorts, and red socks. The now-traditional Lions kit was adopted for the first time in 1950 [Getty Images] In the 1930 tour of New Zealand, the blue jersey design generated significant controversy. Firstly, it caused a kit clash with the All Blacks, who were forced to find an alternative, leading them to wear white for the first time in their history. Advertisement Meanwhile, Irish lock George Beamish questioned the lack of green on the kit, leading to the addition of a green turnover on the socks. The blue jersey remained until the last tour before World War Two, in South Africa in 1938. After the end of the conflict, the Lions scheduled a return to New Zealand in 1950, and the blue jersey was dropped in favour of red in order to avoid the same kit clash which led to the dispute in 1930. From there, the red jersey has stuck and remained unchanged aside from minor branding additions. Kit supplier logos began appearing on Lions kits in 1993, when Nike manufactured the team's apparel, while the first front-of-shirt sponsor was Scottish Provident in 1997. The 1997 Lions jersey was the first to feature both a kit manufacturer logo and front-of-shirt sponsor [Getty Images] This article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything team. Advertisement Ask Me Anything is a service dedicated to answering your questions. We want to reward your time by telling you things you do not know and reminding you of things you do. The team explores everything you need to know and calls upon a network of contacts including our experts and pundits. We answer your questions from the heart of the BBC Sport newsroom, and go behind the scenes at some of the world's biggest sporting events. Our coverage spans the BBC Sport website, app, social media and YouTube accounts, plus BBC TV and radio. More questions answered...


BBC News
14 hours ago
- Sport
- BBC News
Why do the British and Irish Lions wear red jerseys?
The British and Irish Lions have worn their traditional kit of red jerseys, white shorts and blue socks with a green turnover at the top on every tour since colours were chosen in order to represent the unity of the four rugby nations which make up the Lions - England, Ireland, Scotland and to 1950, the Lions had worn kits of various different designs, all featuring the colours red, white, and first Lions kit in 1888 featured blue and red horizontal stripes on a white shirt, with white shorts and blue was followed by a variety of similar designs until 1910, when the team adopted a kit made up of a dark blue jersey with white collar, white shorts, and red socks. In the 1930 tour of New Zealand, the blue jersey design generated significant controversy. Firstly, it caused a kit clash with the All Blacks, who were forced to find an alternative, leading them to wear white for the first time in their Irish lock George Beamish questioned the lack of green on the kit, leading to the addition of a green turnover on the socks. The blue jersey remained until the last tour before World War Two, in South Africa in the end of the conflict, the Lions scheduled a return to New Zealand in 1950, and the blue jersey was dropped in favour of red in order to avoid the same kit clash which led to the dispute in there, the red jersey has stuck and remained unchanged aside from minor branding supplier logos began appearing on Lions kits in 1993, when Nike manufactured the team's apparel, while the first front-of-shirt sponsor was Scottish Provident in 1997. This article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything Me Anything is a service dedicated to answering your want to reward your time by telling you things you do not know and reminding you of things you team explores everything you need to know and calls upon a network of contacts including our experts and answer your questions from the heart of the BBC Sport newsroom, and go behind the scenes at some of the world's biggest sporting coverage spans the BBC Sport website, app, social media and YouTube accounts, plus BBC TV and radio. More questions answered... How did the British and Irish Lions begin?What is tackle school?What are the Triple Crown and Wooden Spoon?How do points work in the County Championship?What is DRS in Formula 1 and what's coming next?