S-Tier: The Instant Jersey Purchase
These are the kits that transcend the sport. You don’t need to know a single player's name to recognize that these are works of art. They are conversation starters, culturally resonant, and an immediate 'add to cart' for anyone with good taste. Mexico’s away kit from 2022 is the undisputed champion here. The cream-colored jersey with its intricate, all-over pattern inspired by Mixtec and Aztec art is simply breathtaking. It’s a design that honors history while looking impossibly modern. It’s the kind of jersey you could wear to a bar and get compliments from people who think FIFA is a type of sedan. Joining it is Japan’s home kit. Taking inspiration from origami, the sharp, geometric blue-and-white pattern is a masterclass in controlled chaos.
It’s dynamic, clean, and uniquely Japanese without hitting you over the head with clichés. Both kits understood the assignment: create something that represents a nation's identity with style and confidence.
A-Tier: The Strong and Silent Types
This tier is for the classics and the elegantly modern. They don't scream for attention with wild patterns, but their quiet confidence is undeniable. These are the blue-chip stocks of the jersey world: reliable, respectable, and always a good investment. Argentina’s home kit is the perennial A-Tier player. The iconic sky-blue and white stripes are timeless. You can’t really mess it up, and thankfully, they rarely do. It radiates history and greatness, evoking images of Maradona and Messi without a single word. It’s the little black dress of soccer jerseys. Similarly, France’s 2022 home kit was a lesson in sophisticated minimalism. The deep, almost-black navy blue paired with subtle gold accents for the logos was pure class. It felt less like a soccer jersey and more like something a Bond villain would wear for a casual kickabout on his private island. England also lands here with a clean white kit featuring a cool, retro-inspired blue-to-light-blue gradient on the shoulders. It’s a nod to the ‘90s without being a cringe-inducing throwback.
B-Tier: So Close, Yet So Far
Welcome to the land of missed opportunities and polarizing choices. These kits had a good idea somewhere in the design process, but the final execution just didn't stick the landing. They’re not ugly, but they’re not great. They’re just… fine. The USA’s 2022 kits are the poster children for this tier. They were mercilessly mocked for looking like bland training tops or, worse, generic teamwear you’d buy from a discount sports catalog. The tie-dye away kit was a swing and a miss, while the home kit’s tiny, center-chest crest and football-style sleeve logos felt like a committee-designed compromise. It was an attempt at being different that ended up being forgettable. Germany’s home kit also fits here. The massive black vertical stripe down the middle of a white shirt was certainly a bold choice. For some, it was a strong, powerful statement. For many others, it looked like the printer ran out of ink halfway through the job. It’s memorable, but for reasons that are still up for debate.
C-Tier: The 'What Were They Thinking?' Collection
This is the tier of sartorial tragedy. These are the jerseys that make you question everything. Were the designers okay? Did they see the final product before it went to manufacturing? These kits are memorable for all the wrong reasons. Portugal’s 2022 home kit is a prime example. The diagonal red-and-green split was meant to evoke the nation’s flag being wrapped around the body. A nice idea in theory, but in practice, it looked awkward and unbalanced, like two different jerseys were clumsily stitched together. It did a disservice to a team usually known for its sleek style. But the true bottom-of-the-barrel award goes to a collection of Puma-designed away kits, including Switzerland’s. They featured a strange, number-in-a-box design element placed awkwardly in the middle of the chest, looking like a last-minute patch for a video game. It was a bizarre, template-driven failure that felt lazy and soulless, proving that even at the highest level of sport, fashion disasters can and do happen.














