What Arsenal kits have they worn this season
What Arsenal kit have the side worn in each match and does that have any influence on the results? Find out below where you can also get a look at the leaked kits for next season…

What Arsenal kit have the side worn in each match and does that have any influence on the results? Find out below where you can also get a look at the leaked kits for next season…
Arsenal will wear their full home kit for their home game (in Athens) against Benfica in the Europa League.
FootyHeadlines reported that Arsenal will use scarlet as their main colour for the new home shirt, with white and ‘mystery blue’ as the other two colours to feature in the design. For those who aren’t aware, scarlet is a darker shade of red than the current design.
FootyHeadlines don’t know anything specific about the design just yet, but they expect the blue colour to be used on the shirt stripes. The white will presumably feature on the shorts, socks, and possibly the sleeves, as usual.
There are no details of the exact release date just yet, with the report only suggesting it will be between late May and July.
In November, we got our first look at the 2021-22 away kit details, with the shirt expected to be ‘pearl citrine’ coloured and inspired by kits from the 1970s to the 1990s. Citrine is a “transparent, yellow variety of Quartz, ranging in colour from pale to golden yellow, honey or almost brown, and may contain rainbow or sparkle inclusions.”
We’re clearly at the start of kit leak season, and I’d expect further details about these two kits and the third kit to come out in the coming months as they start to go into production.
In terms of the actual design of the shirt, what we know from FootyHeadlines is that it will be yellow. Specifically “Pearl Citrine”, if that means anything to any of you. It will be inspired by the away shirts of the 1970s to the 1990s.
The same outlet also suggests the new shirt will “likely” boast the club’s cannon, rather than the current badge. But they don’t say so for certain.
FootyHeadlines also don’t know what accent colour the shirt will use, with the blue in the above picture just for illustrative purposes. However, they do claim to know that the kit will go on sale in July 2021 for around €90 (£80).
Unsurprisingly, the details at this stage in November are still fairly limited. We should know more as we get closer to next summer.
At the very least, the fact we’re going for a yellow away kit this time should please a lot of fans. There’s always a bit of an uproar whenever Arsenal use a colour other than yellow or blue for an away shirt, like with this year’s white shirt.
FootyHeadlines that the primary colour of the new Arsenal third kit will be blue – specifically ‘mystery blue’. They predict this could be combined with red and white as in the above illustrative graphic, but there’s no confirmation of that right now.
One other interesting detail is that FootyHeadlines expect the Adidas logo to be two-coloured. They also expect it to have a look inspired by the 1990s, based on leaks for other club Adidas shirts next season.
The kit will launch around August 2021, making it the last of the three to release.
We already have some details of the home kit, expected to be scarlet red mixed with mystery blue, which probably explains why FootyHeadlines are confident the third kit will use a similar colour scheme in reverse.
The home strip will come out in July or earlier, according to that report. It’s possible Arsenal release at least one of their kits before the current season ends, like they did at the end of the last campaign, though those were circumstances out of the ordinary.
Then we also have information on the away kit, which should be a light yellow or ‘pearl citrine’. There’s a suggestion it could use the Arsenal cannon instead of the current badge, and it should come out in July.
So it looks like we now know the colour scheme of all three kits, red (scarlet), yellow (pearl citrine) and blue (mystery blue). I doubt there will be many complaints about that, given it’s in keeping with many of Arsenal’s shirts in recent decades.