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  2. 2016 Arsenal L.F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Arsenal_L.F.C._season

    This is Puma's second year supplying Arsenal kit, having taken over from Nike at the beginning of the 2014–15 season. Home: The home kit features Arsenal's traditional colours of red and white. The kit features red trim on the sleeves and a grandad collar. Additionally, golden trim features on the kit for the first time since 2006–07. The ...

  3. 2012–13 Arsenal F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012–13_Arsenal_F.C._season

    Away: Arsenal's new away kit, was revealed on 12 July 2012, with the much speculated purple and black hooped kit being officially confirmed. [159] The reason behind the kit was to commemorate Arsenal's past, enhancing the "royal" theme from the Diamond Jubilee to remind Arsenal fans of the Royal Arsenal that once existed through the colour ...

  4. 1999–2000 Arsenal F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999–2000_Arsenal_F.C...

    At the start of the 1999–2000 season, Arsenal ended its long-standing kit sponsorship with JVC. [5] The club signed a three-year deal with SEGA as replacement, worth £10 million. [6] The SEGA Dreamcast name was carried on the home kit, while SEGA was embroidered on the new yellow away kit. [6]

  5. Arsenal F.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenal_F.C.

    After Puma began manufacturing Arsenal's kits in 2014, new home, away and third kits were released every season. In the 2017–18 season, Puma released a new colour scheme for the away and third kits. The away kit was a light blue, which faded to a darker blue near the bottom, while the third kit was black with red highlight.

  6. 1987–88 Arsenal F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1987–88_Arsenal_F.C._season

    The 1987–88 season was Arsenal Football Club's 62nd consecutive season in the top flight of English football. [1] [2] Arsenal finished sixth in the Football League First Division. Although the team again reached the final of the League Cup, Arsenal could not replicate the previous season's success, losing 3-2 to Luton Town.

  7. 1995–96 Arsenal F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995–96_Arsenal_F.C._season

    Arsenal blew their best chance of silverware in February after they went out of the League Cup to eventual winners Aston Villa in the semi-finals. Rioch did manage to right the ship and lead Arsenal to 5th, on the last day of the season, and a place in the UEFA Cup after losing just two of their final thirteen league matches.

  8. 1997–98 Arsenal F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997–98_Arsenal_F.C._season

    [2] [3] In Arsène Wenger's first full season at the club, the Gunners won the league title for the first time in seven years. At Wembley Stadium , they beat Newcastle United 2–0 in the 1998 FA Cup Final to win the competition for the first time since 1993 and complete a domestic double – the second in the club's history and the first since ...

  9. 1998–99 Arsenal F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998–99_Arsenal_F.C._season

    United also eliminated Arsenal in a FA Cup semi-final replay; Ryan Giggs scored an extra time winner in the 109th minute. Arsenal competed in Europe's premier club competition – the UEFA Champions League – for the first time since its rebrand in 1992, but failed to progress past the group stage.