@@odiodiodiiiGucci a été créé en Italie mais appartient à un groupe français Kering* tout comme Moncler a été créé en France mais appartient à un groupe Italien
it's good but I'd rather have a koenigsegg logo on the shirt, it's a Swedish car brand so that it makes sense and it would be similar to the Germany kit with the Volkswagen logo on it.
Fun fact: ING is actually already the main sponsor of the Dutch national squad (and has been for years). You can see the sponsored shirts usually in the full squad pictures on the shirts in major tournaments
@@Footy13s Not on Match-shirts, but 45 !!! years as DFB Main Sponsor on trainingsshirt like LURPARK the DBU Danmark or ING in Nederlande. with adidas, all these looser sell they.
Fifa wouldn't allow a brewer's logo on a national team shirt at a World Cup. In some countries when showing the Champions League, they can't show Heineken's logo. The instead show Heineken's "enjoy responsibly" logo.
@CharlieFoxtrot128 Thank you, captain obvious. I didn't notice that watching every World Cup since 02. But even if they did or in the future if they ever decide to, certain industries that are not "family friendly" wouldn't be allowed to advertise on national team shirts like alcoholic beverage manufacturers.
Practically all the sponsors look just a touch too high to me, I think they'd look far better with a bit more separation from the badge and kit provider.
Moi j'achète que les maillots d'équipes nationales justement parce qu'il n'y a pas de sponsors,je trouve que c'est bien plus beau et plus sobre, maintenant c'est une histoire de goût. Je suis vraiment contre
England would probably have the CBI. Covers over 170,000 businesses in one hit. I’ll agree it’s probably not the most glamorous or exciting brand to have on your shirt.
@@linkuppodcast9999 idk if you made all these designs but if you did, hats off, fantastic selection for each nation & made me genuinely consider how interesting it would be to see national teams represent their countries most iconic brands and businesses. It'd be a win-win for both parties and consumerism at large