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Puma and WPS Unveil 09/10 Kits

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PUMA and the stars of Women’s Professional Soccer (WPS), including three-time FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year, Marta, number one WPS draft pick and Olympic Gold Medalist, Amy Rodriguez, and US National Team midfielder and Women’s World Cup bronze medalist, Leslie Osborne, unveiled the home and away uniforms in New York today at a high-profile fashion presentation.   

TV personality and two-time Olympic Gold Medalist, Summer Sanders hosted the event, while fashion designer and winner of TV’s Project Runway Season 4, Christian Siriano added to the excitement by designing his own fashion interpretation of a home and away uniforms inspired by the colors and materials from of the league’s uniforms.

The WPS uniforms will be put to the test in the WPS Inaugural Match on March 29th in Los Angeles, California when the Los Angeles Sol takes on the Washington Freedom. 

PUMA brings a sense of fashion, flair and femininity to the kits with tailored jerseys, shorts and wraps. Although the uniforms have a more tailored silhouette, the technical materials, cuts and shapes are driven purely by performance, designed for the players to have the maximum flexibility to get them to the ball faster.

Made with 100% polyester, the PUMA WPS kits contain contract mesh inserts for comfort and breathability and, a shaped hem and flatlock stitching for a more feminine silhouette.  Each garment also has a wicking finish to allow for moisture management, keeping the players dry and comfortable. 

“Having the right technical gear and footwear during a 90-minute game is crucial to any soccer player,” said Leslie Osborne.  “PUMA has made apparel and footwear with the player in mind and they have truly proven themselves once again with the new WPS uniforms.  As a PUMA player, I enjoy PUMA both on and off the field.  Not only do they make athletic wear that performs, but it’s comfortable and stylish.”

       

Two players from each of the league’s seven teams graced the runway in their respective home and away kits:  recently signed PUMA athlete, Amy Rodriguez and Angela Hucles for the Boston Breakers, Carli Lloyd and Nikki Krzysik for the Chicago Red Stars, PUMA athlete Leslie Osborne and Christina DiMartino for FC Gold Pride (San Francisco Bay Area), PUMA athlete Marta Vieira da Silva and Johanna Frisk for the Los Angeles Sol, Hope Solo and Lori Chalupny for the Saint Louis Athletica, Heather O’Reilly and Christie Rampone for the Sky Blue FC (NY/NJ Area), and Allie Long and Sarah Huffman for the Washington Freedom.  The key color combinations for the team uniforms are:        

 

Team
 Home  Away
 Boston Breakers    Team Royal   
 White
 Chicago Red Stars
 Team Pearl Blue
 White
 FC Gold Pride
 PUMA Black  Team Gold
 Los Angeles Sol  New Navy & Team Yellow  White
 Saint Louis Athletica
 USA Forest Green
 Pace Grey
 Sky Blue FC
 Team Pearl Blue
Team Orange
 Washington Freedom  New Navy
PUMA Red

 

Christian Siriano, known for his bold work during Project Runway Season 4, has been a long time friend of the PUMA brand, designing outfits for musicians such as Estelle and Lady Gaga using existing PUMA fabrics and pieces.  For this special uniform unveiling, in true PUMA fashion, Siriano designed his take on the home and away uniforms by infusing his style, personality and charm with the PUMA sportlifestyle DNA and female athletes in mind.

The two design creations were showcased as part of the WPS Uniform unveiling, reinforcing PUMA’s fusion of both sport and lifestyle.  After the event, PUMA will work with WPS to highlight Siriano’s custom-designed outfits throughout the season and eventually auction his pieces later in the year, with proceeds going to a charity befitting of WPS, PUMA and Siriano. “This is the first time I’ve ever designed for athletes – it’s perfect because I always design for strong women in my Ready to Wear collections and professional athletes definitely have to be tough in mind, body and spirit,” said fashion designer Christian Siriano.  “These soccer players are amazing and I love it!” 

PUMA became an official founding partner of WPS and an official sponsor of all WPS franchises in December 2008. The multi-year partnership makes PUMA the official sport and lifestyle apparel, footwear and equipment supplier of WPS, including the official WPS Match Ball.  In addition to on-field performance wear, PUMA will outfit the athletes and teams at all WPS-related events, activities and WPS appearances in sportlifestyle apparel. This partnership will allow PUMA and WPS to enhance the game of women’s soccer together and will act as the foundation in the PUMA Women’s category.  PUMA will launch a fully integrated advertising campaign starring their PUMA athletes, Marta Vieira da Silva, Leslie Osborne and Amy Rodriguez, that will run this upcoming season.

PUMA is a leader in the game of soccer with a European portfolio of five National Teams, including current FIFA World Cup™ holders Italy, Austria, Switzerland, Bulgaria and Czech Republic.  In addition to being the official supplier to these European teams, PUMA has a long standing relationship with 11 African soccer Federations including the current CAF African Cup of Nations™ holders, Egypt, Ghana, Cameroon, Angola, Ivory Coast, Morocco, Senegal, Tunisia and Namibia.  In the U.S., PUMA has worked with all-star Major League Soccer athletes such as Matt Reis, Brian Ching and Dwayne De Rosario.

Picture via TheoriginalWinger


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Comments 

 
0 # 2009-02-25 04:21
Someone btter explain to the yanks that they are playing FOOTBALL, so name your teams FOOTBALL TEAM NAMES! The names alone get me sick.
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0 # 2009-02-25 17:30
While not part of the official name, are you telling me The Magpies, The Tykes, The Adcensoreds, The Tractor Boys, The Canaries, The Lilywhites, The Toffees, The Potters, The Baggies, The Latics, The Cumbrians, The Posh, etc. are any better? The WPS\'s official names incorporate the city/state/area with a nickname. What\'s the crime in that? Are they my favorite names? No. But I\'m not going to waste time bashing them. They have significance in one way or another, one you might not understand. Just as the nicknames I mentioned above. I don\'t know the meaning behind each so I don\'t go out of my way to bash them
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0 # 2009-02-25 07:05
You\'re being very ignorant. Were playing soccer, not football. We name our teams soccer names. Get a clue you clown
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0 # Kallenovsky 2009-02-25 07:09
I\'m mixed on some of the teams names. I like the Chicago Red Stars name though since it refers to the city flag and what it symbolizes. Kudos to Peter Wilt for his work with the club and good luck to the league! Choosing Puma was a step in the right direction.
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-1 # 2009-02-25 10:24
Lets get this straight right from the start ! we invented the game in England its called football not soccer. We wear shirts shorts and socks not wraps ...you buy them in Macdonalds. we certainly don\'t wear uniforms either. Now onto the kit not uniform...it looks pretty good, as usual a massively over the top marketing blurb which makes you want to puke but hey PUMA have done a good job here. new names for sports invented by yanks and by the way played virtually nowhere else..baseball is now known as hitandrun ball. American football is called throwandtackleball or wasteoftimeball.
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0 # 2009-02-25 12:02
Oh for Christ\'s sake, not again. This happens often enough on the cesspool of human retardation that is Yahoo! Answers and now it\'s happening here too? Regardless of what you think of American sports it would be nice if you could just get your facts right - soccer is a BRITISH word, with it\'s origins in the late 19th century at after the foundation of the Football Association, and the subsequent breakaway that became the Rugby Football Union - \"soccer\" is a corruption of \"association\" in the same way the now archaic \"Rugger\" is of Rugby, at a time when both codes had their hardcore loyalists who insisted their game was the one true \"football\" (nothing\'s changed there then).

Oh, and the English may have been the first to successfully codify the game, but they certainly weren\'t the first to play it. China is one place that lays claim to having a similar game hundreds of years before England even existed, along with...and you\'re gonna hate this...the Americas! So in actual fact they could be asking you what you\'ve done to their game Sorry to ruin your day with facts and everything, but that\'s just the way it is...
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0 # 2009-02-25 13:55
Then why is it called the FA CUP you numb nuts or shall we chage the name of FIFA to FISA just for a few in bred yanks ...its called football. Get back to hitandrun ball Charlie Brown!
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0 # 2009-02-25 12:46
Mexico also had a game using their feet and a ball well before the \"english\" invented Football.

Dont be on here shouting how the americans call it soccer! its an international game with many different names, at the end of the day, its the beautiful game!
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+1 # Jay29ers 2009-02-25 13:24
\"This happens often enough on the cesspool of human retardation that is Yahoo! Answers and now it\'s happening here too?\"

lol @ \"cesspool of human retardation\" but if you haven\'t noticed the similarity before then you obviously haven\'t seen this site when Celtic or Rangers or Northern Ireland or Eire or Linfield etc release a new kit. Or an orange shirt is released. Or a green one. Or one with hoops.
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0 # 2009-02-25 16:52
And you jump right in don\'t ya
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0 # 2009-02-25 16:54
Quote:
Lets get this straight right from the start ! we invented the game in England its called football not soccer. We wear shirts shorts and socks not wraps ...you buy them in Macdonalds. we certainly don\'t wear uniforms either. Now onto the kit not uniform...it looks pretty good, as usual a massively over the top marketing blurb which makes you want to puke but hey PUMA have done a good job here. new names for sports invented by yanks and by the way played virtually nowhere else..baseball is now known as hitandrun ball. American football is called throwandtackleball or wasteoftimeball.


last time I checked YOU also buy them MCDONALDS

Roginho what trying to be Brazilian and you call yourself ENGLISH what a shame
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0 # Amadeus Angelillo 2009-02-25 13:27
For me its called Calcio....but still Sky Blue FC isn\'t the best choice for a name, to be honest i don\'t mind American league names, they add something and you instantly know their American. Only in American would the New York Cosmos have existed and my favourite name yet San Jose Earthquakes...might not be to the european tastes...but the football kits from the NASL were among the most novel and best designed [bar the Diplomats], despite its limited success.
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0 # 2009-02-25 13:49
Soccer players wear socks. Rappers wear wraps.
How cool do her boots look?
I have nothing constructive to say.
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+1 # 2009-02-25 15:12
I get so tired of the constant elitism of some English people. Notice that it is always an Englishman? Everywhere in the world has different names for the sport, whether it be futbol, football, calcio, or soccer. There are many more. As far as I know, Australians also call it soccer. Rather than arrogantly insisting that everyone be the same, you should take the time to learn and appreciate the differences in culture.

I\'m an American and I don\'t particularly like the team names (and I also refer to the sport as football), but as someone else said: they\'re distinctively American. You know that right away and you know that it\'s part of the culture. All sports teams have names like that. Do these names in particular suck? Yeah, I think so. Do these kits suck? Honestly, in my opinion, yes. But that other people are playing and being exposed to the beautiful game should be enough for anyone that truly loves it.
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+1 # 2009-02-25 16:13
Obviously they named the Football Association using the word \"football,\" but what he said about \"soccer\" being a British English word is correct, and you didn\'t refute it at all. Back when footy was only played by fopish English schoolboys, they\'d say, \"Wanna play some football?\" and the reply would come, \"Sure, soccer or rugger?\" and they would play. Because a code similar to rugby soon became the dominant form of football in America, and was soon transformed into American football, association football was the one that needed the distinguishing name, since for most people the word \"football\" meant American football. If had rugby become the most dominant form of football in Britain, and in some parts of northern England and certainly Ireland you could argue it did, then \"football\" in Britain would probably mean rugby football to most people, and you would probably know association football as \"soccer.\" The point is being a censored about it, especially when you\'re talking out of your ass with respect to facts, is pointless, and makes you look like an idiot.
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+1 # 2009-02-25 16:44
Englans didn\'t invent football, they just put the rules, but the mayas and aztecas already played football before, it is natural for any human being to kick something when you are bored, like when you walk in the streets and see a rock and start kickin it all the way till you loose it... that is why football is our one and only common language in the whole world, of course except for yanks, indians and some other suckers!
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0 # 2009-02-25 16:50
Didn\'t anyone notice some hot football, fußbal, soccer, calcio, futebol girls or what
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0 # 2009-02-25 17:23
End of the day who gives a shit what it\'s called as long as you can play it
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0 # 2009-02-25 18:51
We have a winner.

Roginho, you need to get out more.
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0 # 2009-02-25 19:19
Some of those ladies look very good, and it\'s not the kits

But hold on... are... those... SKIRTS I see??? :huh:
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0 # 2009-02-25 19:21
On some of the kits I meant...
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0 # 2009-02-25 19:27
So, looking back on this article, I don\'t think the wraps are meant to be played in. I think they\'re just part of the fashion show. But were they to be an option to play in, it would certainly be unique and interesting. I\'m all for that...I\'d even play in a kilt myself...
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0 # 2009-02-26 00:39
So I looked it up on the WPS website and the wraps were made for four of the team and are attached to the shorts. They won\'t be worn in the games, but to and from matches and such. It\'s still pretty unique. Shame they won\'t wear them in games.
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0 # 2009-02-26 21:25
Quote:
While not part of the official name, are you telling me The Magpies, The Tykes, The Adcensoreds, The Tractor Boys, The Canaries, The Lilywhites, The Toffees, The Potters, The Baggies, The Latics, The Cumbrians, The Posh, etc. are any better? The WPS\'s official names incorporate the city/state/area with a nickname. What\'s the crime in that? Are they my favorite names? No. But I\'m not going to waste time bashing them. They have significance in one way or another, one you might not understand. Just as the nicknames I mentioned above. I don\'t know the meaning behind each so I don\'t go out of my way to bash them


THOSE ARE NICKNAMES THAT YOU LISTED! I\'m on about official names you twat! Can\'t you read?
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0 # 2009-03-02 20:20
Right, ENGLAND did invent football, what the chinese, mexicans and indians all claim to have done is kick parts of animals round between each other, that is not football (soccer) otherwise all sports would be the same and everyone could claim to invent them. The worlds first football rules were put into place in England, and the first and oldest ever clubs (Sheffield FC) were formed in England.
Respect each others history - just ignore the few idiots, regards!
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