Pure dogshit. The mismatched random stripes, patchwork quilt effect is killing my eyes! Their broccoli crest also gets lost with all of those stripes, and being located on a black stripe doesn't help the visibility of a crest with a black background. Another failure for our favorite trust fund boy..
This is obviously their "TV kit" because that pattern makes me want to pound the top of the TV to adjust the picture.
Reminds me of the paint scheme they use on cars that haven't been unveiled yet to try to render spy photos useless.
I love it. One of the few unique jerseys in MLS over the last decade. The sponsor isn't offensive or overpowering. 9/10. Keep Austin Weird, baby. Verde.
Seattle's Bruce Lee Kit: I really dig this one. Looks like a Salt Lake jersey, but really sharp. Portland's new plaid jersey: Not too far from their traditional, the plaid pattern looks pretty good. I even like Philly's attempt at a pattern. The dark blue stripped down logo and sponsor color looks very good.
See, I kind of like it. Not as much as their last version of it which I thought was killer, but pretty decent. I like it slightly more than ours.
It vaguely reminds me of off-color camouflage which I just don't like on jerseys or fashion apparel. But that might just be me seeing that.
Dallas Burn is back Nod to the past with an eye on the future. 🔥@FCDallas’ 2023 kit is here.— Major League Soccer (@MLS) February 16, 2023
Does it have a trendy name though? OTOH, it's GREAT to see all the different styles and not the same cookie-cutter crap we got when most of the league had white away jerseys or the 2020 thing with the solid color and three shoulder stripes.
Yes. But we've made doing so awfully easy for them. Those two matches are going to look like intra squad scrimmages.
By the way, we obviously didn't buy into the "famous person associated with our city" kit concept this year: Nashville, Johnny Cash Seattle, Bruce Lee But I think a Crew "Guy Fieri" kit could have been a real game-changer had we gone that direction. Someone reach out to Marcus Dilley and pitch the idea.