Chelsea's current fluorescent outfit came close to making this list. But the Blues have previous when it comes to kits. And none has surely been worse than the grey-and-orange shirt worn by legends such as Ruud Gullit in the mid-90s.
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2) Manchester United Away Kit 1994United have been as guilty as anyone for forcing bad shirts on to the market. Alex Ferguson quickly got rid of this grey number after claiming his players could not see each other during a defeat at Southampton. The fiery Scot even made them change into their third kit at half time.
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When Norwich were pulling up trees in Europe, they wore a terrifyingly bad home shirt. Bayern Munich and Inter Milan must have scared stiff. Jeremy Goss and co looked like they had come straight from paintball during their UEFA Cup run
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4) Coventry City Away Kit 1978What were they thinking!? |
The early 90s was an experimental era in the history of kits. Top-flight shirts were becoming louder by the season and Arsenal did not help matters with a blinding attack of yellow-and-navy triangles. The Gunners have always welcomed new designs but they overstepped the mark on this one.
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6) Aston Villa Away Kit 1993Back in the days when Aston Villa were a big force in English football, they produced an absolute horror of a shirt. Whoever thought green-and-black panels would work with red pin stripes clearly failed to ask the fans for their opinion on the matter.
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