Beltona, Home; 2014-15
In its current guise, Curacao exists as a full FIFA member
since March 2011. This followed the dissolution of Netherlands Antilles, a
collection of six Caribbean islands of which Curacao was one. Similar to how
Russia is seen as the direct successor of the USSR, Curacao is seen as the
successor to Netherlands Antilles. Therefore, Curacao held on to Netherlands Antilles’
historical records and FIFA place. Despite
such a short history of the present Curacao, teams baring the name of ‘Curacao’
have played games as far back as the 1920s. In the early days, the national
team toured to neighbouring islands to challenge other national sides. In 1934
the then ‘Curacaose Voetbal Bond’ became affiliated with FIFA and in 1941 they
played in the inaugural CCCF (the forerunner to CONCACAF in the Caribbean and Central American region) Championship, where they finished a respectable
3rd of five nations. Despite finding relative success as an
independent team, Curacao agreed to
amalgamation with fellow Netherlands Antilles island Aruba in 1958, to create
the ‘Netherlands Antillean Football Union’ (which also included four other
smaller islands). This union would
remain unchanged until 1986, when Aruba succeeded to go their own way as an independent
team in their own right. The other five islands would remain a union until the
Netherlands Antilles were dissolved as a political union, thereby forcing
Curacao to go it alone in footballing terms the following year.
As mentioned above, Curacao retained the history of N.A. and
their crest remained all but the same. Interestingly, because the political
dissolution in 2010 occurred so close to the beginning of qualifying for the
2010 Caribbean Cup, the Netherlands Antilles actually partook under that name,
the name of a country that no longer legally existed.
Given the historically links with the Netherlands, it is no
surprise that this shirt is made by a Dutch company, namely Beltona. In my opinion, this
shirt is a great example of what can be achieved when a smaller company is used rather than simply applying badges to a template from a global brand. Instead of a generic design, the national flag has been subtly
worked into the shirt. The result is simply a really nice shirt. The only
disappointing element is that the crest and Beltona logo are sublimated rather
than embroidered. However, this is the flip side of not using a 'teamwear' option. Sublimation allows for individual designs to be used as there is less work in the actual stitching together of the shirt. Sometimes you have to make that trade-off.
No comments:
Post a Comment