England launches new Nike kits for 2026 World Cup

England has released its new Nike home, away, and goalkeeper kits for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, with players like Harry Kane and Jordan Pickford modeling the designs. The kits went on sale immediately, featuring elements that evoke ambition and nostalgia. Captain Kane expressed particular excitement for the red away shirt.

England's national football team unveiled its new kits for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, putting the home, away, and goalkeeper shirts on sale through Nike. The Football Association described the designs as embodying the team's “ambition to bring the joy back to English football.” Players including Jordan Pickford, Elliot Anderson, Marcus Rashford, Harry Kane, Myles Lewis-Skelly, and Jude Bellingham modeled the strips in promotional materials. The launch video featured a voiceover from The Streets' Mike Skinner, who asked: “Can the Jules Rimet come home again? To England, to this green and pleasant land.” The white home shirt includes a distinct collar and fabric print that “pops,” according to designers. Arsenal's Myles Lewis-Skelly praised it at the launch, saying: “Both are different level. I’m honestly speechless. They’re so clean. Something about the kit is retro but also elegant. It’s going to be a joy to wear it.” Bayern Munich's Harry Kane favored the red away kit with its central badge, noting: “It feels good. Whenever you do stuff like this, it gets you excited for what’s to come. I actually prefer the red one – there’s something about a red England kit for a World Cup that just gets me excited. I have good memories.” Everton's Pickford donned the blue goalkeeper kit, remarking: “I feel like David Seaman.” Prices start at £89.99 for adult replica shirts, with match versions at £134.99 and children's shirts at £64.99. Mini-kits range from £49.99 to £54.99, and shorts are £44.99 for adults. Under manager Thomas Tuchel, England will debut one of the kits in their group-stage opener against Croatia at AT&T Stadium in Texas on June 17, 2026, at 21:00 BST, followed by matches against Ghana and Panama.

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England football team training at Swope Soccer Village in Kansas City, their proposed 2026 World Cup base.
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England requests Kansas City as base for 2026 World Cup

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The England national football team has requested Swope Soccer Village in Kansas City, Missouri, as its primary training base for the FIFA World Cup 2026, pending FIFA's approval. The Football Association believes they will secure this first-choice location. The team will use it during the group stage while traveling to matches across the United States.

米国男子サッカー代表は、ナイキがデザインした2026年FIFAワールドカップの公式キットを公開した。ジャージは愛国的な星条旗デザインを基調とし、ダークバージョンには特注のジャカードスター、ライトバージョンにはグラデーションのストライプが施されている。

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ナイキは、ワールドカップを控えたイングランド代表ファン向けにデザインされたAir Max 95「England」エディションの詳細を公開した。このスニーカーは、白を基調に赤とシルバーのアクセントを施し、スリー・ライオンズのエンブレムを特徴としている。3月23日から190ドルで購入可能となる。

England has chosen Swope Soccer Village in Kansas City, Missouri, as its team base camp for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The announcement, made on February 11, 2026, highlights the region's growing reputation in international soccer. This follows a similar decision by Argentina the previous week.

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England supporters are avoiding tickets for the later stages of the 2026 FIFA World Cup due to soaring costs, leaving allocations undersubscribed. The England Supporters Travel Club reports oversubscription only for group matches, while quarter-finals and beyond remain underfilled. Critics warn that prices up to five times higher than in 2022 are pricing out loyal fans.

FIFA unveiled the official visual identity for the 2027 Women's World Cup to be hosted in Brazil during a ceremony in Rio de Janeiro on January 25, 2026. The event highlighted optimism for the Brazilian national team and opened ticket interest registration. Brazilian officials and soccer legends attended the launch.

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FIFA is reportedly set to raise the limit on clubs per country from two to three for the expanded Club World Cup, potentially benefiting English teams like Liverpool and Arsenal. This change follows criticism of the inaugural 32-team tournament held this summer in the United States. The decision could be discussed at a FIFA Council meeting in Zurich.

 

 

 

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