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The cockerel is a long way from being a Tottenham one. It looks like a France away shirt - especially with the light blue line. The navy version is nicer ... but still looks like a France shirt. Am seeing lots of supposed legit retro hipster football shirt companies like this.
 
Quite liked it when I first clicked on it. Scrolled through the other images and then got to the last one, the reality is without the seductive studio lights it looks like a T-Shirt from by Goerge at ASADA!
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Why Tottenham’s kit deal is worth a lot less than Big Six rivals
29 March 2019 11:42 AM
Photo: Getty Images
Daniel Levy calls for realism when comparing Spurs’ sponsorship deals with Big Six rivals.
Offthepitch.com can exclusively reveal how many shirts Tottenham sold per year in average.
Manchester City also struggling in shirt sales compared to rivals at the top of the Premier League.

ALEX MILLER [email protected]

Tottenham have admitted their extended kit deal with Nike - worth £30 million a year - is worth less than the other ‘Big Six’ Premier League clubs because they don’t sell as many kits.
The 15-year extension to their kit supply deal with the US-based sports apparel giant was reportedly worth £450 million when it was announced in October.
However, this is less than half the value of the most lucrative deal - Manchester United’s £75 million a year deal with Adidas.
Speaking at a recent Tottenham Hotspur Supporters’ Trust meeting, club officials admitted their deal reflected the number of shirts the club is able to shift.
‘BIG SIX’ PREMIER LEAGUE KIT DEALS - PER YEAR
  • Manchester UnitedAdidas£75m
  • Manchester CityPuma£65m
  • ArsenalAdidas£60m
  • ChelseaAdidas£60m
  • LiverpoolNew Balance£45m
  • TottenhamNike£30m

Confidential agreement
The club admitted their shirt sales were below those at their main domestic rivals, including Manchester United, Liverpool, Woolwich and Chelsea.
Spurs chairman Daniel Levy told the meeting: “Realism was needed, other clubs sell more shirts than Tottenham, which has an impact on the fee.”
Simon Bamber, a club director added that deal values reported in the press were usually inaccurate, with some clubs including potential bonus amounts in their headline figures.
A spokesman for the club told offthepitch.com: “This is a confidential agreement and therefore we wouldn’t be able to provide any details.”
Only sold 268,000 shirts
However, an authoritative new research into Premier League shirt sales by industry insider Dr Peter Rohlmann and his team at the consulting bureau, PR Marketing, confirmed Tottenham’s position in relation to shirt sales.
The White Hart lane club sold an average of 268,000 shirts per year in the four-season period from 2014-15 to 2017-18 inclusive, offthepitch.com can exclusively reveal.
By comparison, Manchester United topped the popularity stakes, having sold an average of more than 1,862,500 shirts each season during the four years, with Liverpool second selling an average of 1,050,000 shirts per year.
The two giants are the only English clubs to shift seven-figure volumes every year.


United and Liverpool remain the two most popular clubs globally in English football, and the United-Liverpool fixture remains the biggest global draw in the Premier League calendar, in terms of global audience figures.
Woolwich were the third most popular club, selling 875,000 shirts per season, ahead of Chelsea. The Stamford Bridge club shifted an average of 787,500 shirts a year during this four-year period.
Revenues tend to be split
Manchester City sold significantly fewer shirts in fifth spot, shifting an average of 342,000 a year. It is worth noting that City’s new £65 million a year kit deal with Puma also covers sister clubs in Australia, Spain, Uruguay and China.

Spurs stadium repayments is almost £50 million a year – but the increase in matchday income is even bigger
25 March 2019 7:55 AM

Revenues tend to be split between manufacturers and clubs, with the kit makers raking in the lion’s share. Levy told the THST meeting that it was difficult to compare Tottenham’s kit deal to some of their rivals, as some of them had also sold their merchandising rights, while Spurs prefer to keep hold of theirs.
North London rivals Woolwich are set to begin a kit deal with Adidas in the summer worth a reported £60 million a year.
The length of the new Nike contract does provide Tottenham with a level of cash flow
Nike agreed a £900 million deal with Chelsea that also spans 15 years, which also works out at £60 million per year.
In recent months, Tottenham have also announced a number of new brand partnership deals with Audi, IWC Schaffhausen, HPE and EA SPORTS.
The length of the new Nike contract does provide Tottenham with a level of cash flow certainty at a time when the club will have to service cash outflows relating to the new £1 billion stadium.
A club statement on the financial situation at the club recently revealed: “The residual amount of gross debt to be converted or extinguished will depend on a number of factors including several commercial discussions.”
 
Think I'm going to finally get one of the 3rd kits with Ndombele on it.

Has anyone ordered one of these NFL jackets? Absolutely love them but price is a bit steep, wondering if the quality is good...

 
Think I'm going to finally get one of the 3rd kits with Ndombele on it.

Has anyone ordered one of these NFL jackets? Absolutely love them but price is a bit steep, wondering if the quality is good...



Its nice but those sleeves area bit weird.
 
I got the dark purple training top with the flashy badge in the Nike sale. Very nice, but reminds me of the VAR decision logo, which could be good or bad.
 
I was going to buy one of the lovely blue away tops until I saw the price! 90 quid? That's taking the piss out of supporters who can never afford that.
 
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