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Traditional Colours to Take Centre Stage as FIFA Unveils World Cup 2026 Kit Plans

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By Kunle Solaja.

With just eight days remaining before the FIFA World Cup 2026 kicks off in Mexico City, FIFA has released the planned kit colours for all 72 group-stage matches, confirming that football’s former champions will begin their campaigns in the colours most closely associated with their World Cup heritage.

According to FIFA, every previous FIFA World Cup winner participating in the expanded 48-team tournament will wear its traditional colours in its opening match, giving fans a nostalgic visual connection to some of the competition’s most iconic moments.

Defending champions Argentina will open their title defence against Algeria in their famous sky-blue-and-white “Albiceleste” stripes, while five-time champions Brazil will take on Morocco in their iconic yellow shirts and blue shorts.

England will wear their customary all-white strip against Croatia, France will appear in navy blue and white against Senegal, Germany will sport white with black, red and gold accents against debutants Curaçao, while Spain will wear red and blue against Cabo Verde.

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Uruguay, winners of the inaugural World Cup in 1930, will begin their campaign against Saudi Arabia in their traditional light-blue jerseys.

Tournament hosts will also feature prominently in their national colours. Mexico will launch the competition against South Africa in their iconic green strip at the Estadio Azteca, Canada will wear red against Bosnia and Herzegovina in Toronto, and the United States will sport their patriotic red-and-white-striped kit against Paraguay in Los Angeles.

FIFA said the kit allocations were designed to preserve football traditions while ensuring maximum colour contrast between competing teams. Whenever possible, one team will wear a predominantly dark kit and the other a light-coloured strip to assist spectators, including those with colour-vision deficiencies.

While the group-stage colours have now been designated, FIFA noted that final confirmation for each match will only be made at the official match coordination meeting held on the eve of every fixture.

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Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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Algeria keep faith with Petkovic, extend deal to 2028 ahead of World Cup

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Vladimir Petkovic applauds Switzerland supporters after the Euro 2020 quarter-final against Spain in St. Petersburg, Russia, on July 2, 2021. Petkovic, who now coaches the Algerian national team, recently secured a contract extension following his successful stewardship of the Desert Foxes. (Photo by Maxim Shemetov/Pool via Reuters/File)

Algeria have extended the contract of national team coach ​Vladimir Petkovic and his technical staff until ‌2028, the country’s football federation said on Sunday, days before the World Cup in North ​America, with his previous deal due ​to expire immediately after the tournament.

Petkovic, ⁠who took charge in February 2024, has ​overseen a strong turnaround, leading Algeria to ​21 wins, four draws and three defeats in 28 matches and guiding the team to qualification ​for the 2026 World Cup, after their ​absence from the 2018 and 2022 editions.

Algeria also reached ‌the ⁠quarter-finals of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations after consecutive group-stage exits in 2021 and 2023, while climbing from 43rd ​to 28th ​in the ⁠FIFA world rankings and from seventh to fourth in Africa ​during the Bosnian’s tenure.

The federation said ​the ⁠extension reflected “stability and confidence in the work accomplished”, with Algeria set to open their ⁠World ​Cup Group J campaign ​against Argentina on June 17 before facing Jordan and Austria.

-Reuters

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World Cup greats Argentina, Brazil, Germany win friendlies days before kick-off

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Brazil's Danilo (left) battles for possession with Egypt's Mahmoud Trezeguet during the international friendly match between Brazil and Egypt at Huntington Bank Field in Cleveland, Ohio, USA, on June 6, 2026. Photo: Ken Blaze/IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters.

Multi-champions Brazil, Argentina and Germany all won their preparatory games for the 2026 FIFA World Cup on Saturday, although by small margins, with former champion England and hopeful Portugal also securing victories.

The busy day ​of friendlies saw some of the biggest stars on display, with Cristiano Ronaldo, Vini Jr and Mohamed Salah playing, but ‌three-time champion Argentina opted to rest Lionel Messi against Honduras in Texas in a game where forward Lautaro Martinez shone with a goal and one assist for a 2-0 win. Simeone scored the second for Argentina.

Five-time champion Brazil beat Egypt 2-1 in Cleveland with Newcastle midfielder Bruno Guimaraes scoring early from inside the box and Lyon forward Endrick ​adding in the second half after an assist from Barcelona’s Raphinha. Zico scored for Egypt, while Salah played the first half and ​seemed to be in good form.

There was some drama with Brazil and AS Roma right back Wesley leaving the ⁠field in tears after what appeared to be a serious muscle injury in the left leg, which might take him out of the World ​Cup. Teams can change players up to one day before their first games.

Harry Kane’s first-half header earned England a 1-0 win over New Zealand in Tampa, ​while there were also victories for Scotland and Belgium as teams fine-tune ahead of the tournament’s kickoff next week.

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With England manager Thomas Tuchel rotating his entire team at halftime and handing minutes to 22 players in the scorching 32-degree Celsius (90-degree Fahrenheit) heat, the result was secondary to the process.

But Kane’s clinical finish with a glancing header into ​the bottom corner from Djed Spence’s cross offered a timely reminder of the skipper’s importance to their hopes of winning a second Cup.

Four-time world ​champions Germany secured a ninth win in a row with a 2-1 victory over World Cup co-hosts the United States in Chicago.

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Germany’s Kai Havertz (left) challenges United States captain Tyler Adams during the international friendly match between the USA and Germany at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois, on June 6, 2026. Photo: Talia Sprague/IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters.

Kai Havertz headed in Joshua Kimmich’s free kick ‌to give ⁠them a second-minute lead, but the Americans snatched a stunning equaliser when Antonee Robinson thundered in a volley after defender Jonathan Tah had headed away a corner.

But Leroy Sane rifled in from 12 metres to restore Germany’s lead in the 57th minute.

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Portugal defeated Chile 2-1 in an ill-tempered clash in Oeiras, where both teams finished with 10 men as Rafael Leao and Ivan Roman received their marching orders.

Goncalo Guedes gave the home side the lead before ​Bruno Fernandes added a second from ​outside the box. Lucas Cepeda scored ⁠a late consolation for Chile.

“We were superior in the 90 minutes, we managed to control the game very well, especially having a lot of the ball in the last third,” Fernandes told RTP.

Striker Romelu Lukaku continued his ​comeback from injury for Belgium with 25 minutes off the bench as they enjoyed a 5-0 victory over ​10-man Tunisia in Brussels.

Leandro ⁠Trossard, Charles De Ketelaere, Kevin De Bruyne, Dodi Lukebakio and Nicolas Raskin scored the goals as Lukaku grabbed an assist.

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“We wanted a good performance in front of our fans,” Belgium coach Rudi Garcia said. “It is a good preparation for the World Cup, we know this team can do great things.”

A much-changed Scotland scored ⁠all their ​goals in the first half as they romped to a 4-0 success over Bolivia in ​New Jersey.

Che Adams bagged two to go with strikes from Lawrence Shankland and Scott McTominay in an impressive performance.

Switzerland and Australia drew 1-1, while Bosnia and Herzegovina were held to the ​same scoreline by Panama.

-Reuters

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World Cup Debutants to Wear Historic First Kits as FIFA Introduces New Tournament Patches

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The four nations making their FIFA World Cup debuts in 2026 will take to the field in distinctive colours as FIFA prepares to introduce a series of new kit innovations aimed at celebrating both newcomers and tournament legends.

FIFA announced that first-time participants Cabo Verde, Curaçao, Jordan and Uzbekistan will each wear specially designated colours when they make their long-awaited World Cup bows during the group stage.

Cabo Verde will face Spain in an all-white kit, while Curaçao will wear blue against Germany. Jordan are set to appear in white with red trim when they meet Austria, and Uzbekistan, known as the White Wolves, will live up to their nickname by wearing white against Colombia.

Beyond the kit colours, FIFA has unveiled several new sleeve patches that will feature throughout the tournament in North America.

Every match kit will carry the official FIFA World Cup 2026 competition badge on the right sleeve, while the left sleeve will display special social impact campaign messages. During the group stage, players will wear “Unite for Peace” badges, with “Football Unites the World” and “Unite for Education” messages appearing at different stages of the knockout rounds.

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In another innovation, FIFA will introduce achievement patches recognising significant milestones. Players appearing in their first FIFA World Cup will wear a debut patch, while previous winners of the Golden Boot, Golden Ball and Golden Glove awards will be distinguished by a gold honours patch.

The governing body will also honour some of the tournament’s most enduring stars with a FIFA World Cup Legacy Patch. The distinction will be reserved for players participating in their fifth World Cup or beyond, including global icons Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo and Mexico goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa, who are all set to feature in a record sixth World Cup finals.

FIFA said the initiative is designed to celebrate the tournament’s rich history while recognising the achievements of players making history on football’s biggest stage.

The 2026 FIFA World Cup, the first to feature 48 teams, begins on June 11 in Mexico City and concludes on July 19 at New York New Jersey Stadium.

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