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Good Thursday morning, Uni Watchers. We’re only a couple days away from Super Bowl 59 between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles.
For more than a decade, I’ve teamed up with Timmy Brulia, one of the head honchos over at the incredible Gridiron Uniform Database, to bring you the uniform histories of that year’s SB combatants. The Chiefs and Eagles met a mere two years ago in Super Bowl 57, so both of these teams’ uniform histories have been featured somewhat recently, although never on a weekday. These columns used to run the the day before and the day of the Super Bowl, but now that I’ve moved over to Editor and taken over weekdays, they’ll run today and tomorrow.
As the designated “road” team, we’ll look at the Chiefs’ uniform history first, followed by the Eagles’ uniform history tomorrow.
There’s a lot to get to, so let’s dive right in.
• • • • •
• • • • •
Kansas City Uniform History By Timmy Brulia
1960: The Dallas Texans take the field as one of the eight original American Football League teams. The helmets are red with a white map of the state of Texas on the sides. with a very thin black outline and a yellow star where Dallas is located. The Texans sport white jerseys with red numbers trimmed in yellow on the front and back and tv numbers in the same fashion on the sleeves. The home jerseys are red with white numbers edged in yellow on front and back, with TV numbers in white on yellow on the sleeves. The pants are white with a very thin red/yellow/red stripe pattern on the sides. Socks are white with red/yellow/red stripes (worn with white jerseys) and red with white/yellow/white stripes (worn with red jerseys). Starting with the 11/18 game at Boston, the Texans add names on the backs (NOB) of their jerseys. Red names on the white jerseys and white NOBs on the red jerseys.
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1962: The Texans wear the red socks with both sets of uniforms.
• • •
1963: With dismal attendance in Dallas, the Texans relocate to Kansas City and are renamed the Kansas City Chiefs. Out of necessity the team revises their helmets, keeping the same red color but changing the emblem from the Texas state outline to a white arrowhead, with the point facing forward and a red “KC” inside the arrowhead. The arrowhead and KC have thin black outlines. The rest of the uniform remains as is, with the pant stripes thickening ever so slightly.
1968: For the first tine, stripes are added to the sleeves. The white jerseys have a red/yellow/red combo on the sleeve edge, while the red jerseys feature a white/yellow/white pattern. Red pants are introduced to the mix with side stripes of white/very thin red/yellow/very thin red/white. White socks are reintroduced for the first time since 1961 to be worn with the white jersey/red and pants set and have the same red/yellow/red stripes as worn in ’61.
• • •
1969: The thin red separations of stripes on the red socks are deleted. The team wears special red jerseys for Super Bowl IV. NOBs are serifed and a special 10th season AFL patch is worn on the left shoulder for the game.
• • •
1971: KC joins in on the anti-black cleat craze. The team wears white cleats with the white jerseys and red cleats with the red jerseys.
1977: Sock stripe patterns are changed. For the white socks, stripes are thin red/yellow/thin red/yellow/thin red. On the red socks the stripes are thin yellow/white/thin yellow/white/thin yellow. White cleats are worn full-time.
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1978: The socks revert back to the three-stripe pattern, with the inner yellow stripe being a lot thicker than before on both sets.
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1983: A memorial patch for deceased running back Joe Delaney was worn on the left breast of both jerseys for the season. The helmet logo shrinks a little more.
1989: The red pants are ditched and the white pants are worn with both jerseys.
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1992: A memorial patch for Director of Player Personnel Whitey Dovell is worn on the left breast of both jerseys.
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1994:Two commemorative patches are worn on the jerseys. The league wide NFL 75th season patch is worn on the left breast and the team’s 35th season patch is worn on the right breast. As with all other NFL teams, KC wears throwback jerseys for a few games. These throwbacks are based on the 1963-1967 seasons, with stripeless sleeves and the old style red socks worn with both sets.
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1999: KC’s 40th season is commemorated with a patch on the right breast of both jerseys.
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2000: To the delight of many, the red pants are revived, with the same stripe pattern as worn before, with the inner yellow stripe slimmed down.
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2002: KC wears a commemorative 45th season patch for just one game, 10/27 at home against the Raiders.
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2006: KC wears three uni combos this season, the normal red over white, as well as white over red and white over white.
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2007: After the passing of AFL founder and team founder Lamar Hunt late in 2006, the team wears a permanent patch honoring Hunt. The patch is basically the old AFL insignia with LH on the football in the logo. The all-white combo worn for several games in 2006 is dropped.
2009: KC wears a 50th season patch on the right breast of both regular jerseys. The all-white combination is worn for the last two weeks of the season. As part of the 50th Anniversary of the founding of the American Football League, the team breaks out togs worn when they were the 1962 Dallas Texans, with a special AFL Anniversary patch for three games. The highlight was when the “Texans” in red at home played the Dallas Cowboys, who wore 1962 blue throwbacks of their own on 10/11.
• • •
2010: The red/white, white/red and white/white combos are again worn.
2012: There is a change – a subtle change – on the jerseys. The TV numbers bump up from the sleeves to the shoulders and the sleeve stripes, previously on the sleeve edge, are now offset from the edge. A league-wide patch for the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s 50th Anniversary is worn on the right breast of the white jersey for Weeks 14 and 15. The same three uni combos are worn.
• • •
2013: The usual three combos are worn…PLUS the combo that almost no one thought would never be worn, the red over red! The all-red look (with white striped socks) was worn for the first time on Week 2 against the Cowboys.
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2014: The all-whites take a breather. White/red, red/white and the all-reds (with red striped socks) make another showing, this time for Week 4 at home vs. the Patriots.
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2015: KC wears four combos this season: white/white/red socks, white/red/white, red/white/red and red/red/red.
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2016: Kansas City, noted for their rather conservative taste as other teams fell prey to the mix and match era of the 2010s, go full throttle with six uniform combinations this season. White jerseys are worn with white pants and white socks, white pants and red socks, and red pants with white socks. Red jerseys are worn with white pants and red socks, red pants and red socks, and for the Thursday night Color Rush against the Raiders for Week 14, red pants and red socks without the usual white sanitary socks.
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2017: Four uni combos take the field: white/red/white, red/white/red, red/red/red (with white sannies), red/red/red (without sannies).
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2018: These were the four combos worn: white/red/white, white/white/red, red/white/red and red/red/red.
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2019: Three combos were worn: white/red/white, red/white/red and red/red/red. For Week 9 the team switched out their white face masks for gray. The team wore a Super Bowl Patch in SB LIV which ended the 2019 regular season.
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2020: The COVID-19 Pandemic forces cancellation of all pre-season games. The team appears in SB LV against Tampa Bay and wears a special patch.
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2021: All four color combos were worn (white/white, white/red, red/white, red/red). Gray facemasks were affixed to the helmets for Week 15. From Week 10 on, socks were more or less pick-and-choose between red or white colors.
2023: A memorial patch for Norma K. Hunt, widow of KC’s founder Lamar Hunt, is worn on the right breast of the jerseys starting with the regular season. The red-over-red combo returned for one showing. The other three combos (red/white, white/red, white/white) continued to be worn. The Super Bowl LVIII patch was worn on the right breast, above the Norma Hunt patch, on the red jersey.
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2024: Three basic combos are worn: Red/white/red/white, red/red/white/red and red/white/white, with white socks worn for Week 3 and red socks worn for Week 17. A special Holiday candy cane patch was worn for Weeks 16 (red jersey) and 17 (white jersey). The Super Bowl LIX patch will be worn on the upper right chest of the white jersey.
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Thanks so much, Timmy! Fantastic job as always. Readers, please give Tim a tremendous round of applause for his research prowess and dogged determination to get all the details right for us! He’ll join me again tomorrow with the Eagles uniform history.
Guess the Game from the Scoreboard
Guess The Game…
…From The Scoreboard
Today’s scoreboard comes from Peter Clayton.
The premise of the game (GTGFTS) is simple: I’ll post a scoreboard and you guys simply identify the game depicted. In the past, I don’t know if I’ve ever completely stumped you (some are easier than others).
Here’s the Scoreboard. In the comments below, try to identify the game (date and location, as well as final score). If anything noteworthy occurred during the game, please add that in (and if you were AT the game, well bonus points for you!):
Please continue sending these in! You’re welcome to send me any scoreboard photos (with answers please), and I’ll keep running them.
Guess the Game from the Uniform
Based on the suggestion of long-time reader/contributor Jimmy Corcoran, we’ve introduced a new “game” on Uni Watch, which is similar to the popular “Guess the Game from the Scoreboard” (GTGFTS), only this one asked readers to identify the game based on the uniforms worn by teams.
Like GTGFTS, readers will be asked to guess the date, location and final score of the game from the clues provided in the photo. Sometimes the game should be somewhat easy to ascertain, while in other instances, it might be quite difficult. There will usually be a visual clue (something odd or unique to one or both of the uniforms) that will make a positive identification of one and only one game possible. Other times, there may be something significant about the game in question, like the last time a particular uniform was ever worn (one of Jimmy’s original suggestions). It’s up to YOU to figure out the game and date.
Today’s GTGFTU comes from Steve Conley.
Good luck and please post your guess/answer in the comments below.
And finally...
…that’s going to do it for the early. Please join me in heaping praise upon the one and only Timmy Brulia, whose creation of the GUD (the absolute BEST uniform database anywhere, and it isn’t even close) puts him up on the uni Mt. Rushmore! The Super Bowl uniform histories are just outstanding. Thanks, Tim!
It should be another big day on Uni Watch today, as I’ll have this week’s Collector’s Corner as well as several other articles throughout the morning and afternoon. Keep checking back!
Everyone have a good Thursday, and I’ll catch you back here tomorrow morn. Till then…
GTGFTU: Thanksgiving 2021 (11/25/2021) Buffalo Bills 31 at New Orleans Saints 6, Caesars Superdome New Orleans.
Gtg scoreboard- is this 9/23/07 in a game the Giants would win 24-17?
“1968: For the first time, stripes are added to the sleeves.” I could stare at that Jets/Chiefs photo you linked to all day. If only it was in color! Amazing.
Forgot to note: you said the arrowhead logo shrunk a tad in 1974, and maybe side by side it is just a tad, but when I see those former helmets, that logo looks so huge to me. Honestly, I like the larger version’s looks better, but with today’s lids, it would be tough to pull off.
It’s always bothered me a tiny bit that KC’s helmet logo has a black outline and drop shadow, but no other uniform elements are black. The helmet has no yellow on it either. Seeing the logo or helmet by itself, you’d never know the team wears red/yellow/white uniforms. Still one of the best looking teams in the NFL, just that little detail bugs me.
This is one of those details that never occurred to me until someone on this site pointed it out a few years back. Now, I can’t unsee it, and it bugs me every time I think about it.
Their red over red was tolerable only when they had white socks with stripes
The picture linked for 1962 showing the Texans in red socks is actually from 1961, week 10. The Bills did not wear silver helmets at all in 1962, and GUID shows the Texans in red socks for 1961’s tilt against the Bills.
I’ve always appreciated the fact that the Chiefs have always stuck with the same uniform appearance, concept and colors since their inception into the AFL as the old Dallas Texans. It’s a great case for proper branding considering this was done in the 1960’s, and really is a great example of “If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix It’. I mean, imagine if the Chiefs suddenly decided to alter their uniforms and change the overall appearance, style and even color. NFL fans all over would be screaming WHY?????.
Very agreed. Quietly, the Chiefs have developed an absolutely classic uniform devoid of City Connection, weird patterns, trendy colors, or BFBS.
So glad that the team didn’t do a yellow Color Rush — you saw occasional “pop color” jerseys in bright yellow at times during the 90s and 00s.
I know its a look that didn’t appear on the field, but the Chiefs used to (maybe still do) use a logo with the C sitting over the K.
GTGFTU: Thanksgiving 2021 (11/25/2021) Buffalo Bills 31 at New Orleans Saints 6, Caesars Superdome New Orleans.
Gtg scoreboard- is this 9/23/07 in a game the Giants would win 24-17?
“1968: For the first time, stripes are added to the sleeves.” I could stare at that Jets/Chiefs photo you linked to all day. If only it was in color! Amazing.
Forgot to note: you said the arrowhead logo shrunk a tad in 1974, and maybe side by side it is just a tad, but when I see those former helmets, that logo looks so huge to me. Honestly, I like the larger version’s looks better, but with today’s lids, it would be tough to pull off.
It’s always bothered me a tiny bit that KC’s helmet logo has a black outline and drop shadow, but no other uniform elements are black. The helmet has no yellow on it either. Seeing the logo or helmet by itself, you’d never know the team wears red/yellow/white uniforms. Still one of the best looking teams in the NFL, just that little detail bugs me.
This is one of those details that never occurred to me until someone on this site pointed it out a few years back. Now, I can’t unsee it, and it bugs me every time I think about it.
Their red over red was tolerable only when they had white socks with stripes
The picture linked for 1962 showing the Texans in red socks is actually from 1961, week 10. The Bills did not wear silver helmets at all in 1962, and GUID shows the Texans in red socks for 1961’s tilt against the Bills.
I’ve always appreciated the fact that the Chiefs have always stuck with the same uniform appearance, concept and colors since their inception into the AFL as the old Dallas Texans. It’s a great case for proper branding considering this was done in the 1960’s, and really is a great example of “If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix It’. I mean, imagine if the Chiefs suddenly decided to alter their uniforms and change the overall appearance, style and even color. NFL fans all over would be screaming WHY?????.
Very agreed. Quietly, the Chiefs have developed an absolutely classic uniform devoid of City Connection, weird patterns, trendy colors, or BFBS.
So glad that the team didn’t do a yellow Color Rush — you saw occasional “pop color” jerseys in bright yellow at times during the 90s and 00s.
I know its a look that didn’t appear on the field, but the Chiefs used to (maybe still do) use a logo with the C sitting over the K.
link
The locker room floor was the most prominent, it was probably an error by whoever made the thing, but its still kind of fun to look at