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ADIDAS

Adidas scores marketing success with pink German team shirt

Derided at its unveiling, Germany's pink-and-purple away kit has become the breakout style star of Euro 2024, where it has added a splash of colour to the stands at the host's fixtures.

Germany in pink
Germany's national team away jersey made by Adidas are pictured in official store on March 22, 2024 in Frankfurt am Main. Photo by Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP

The gaudy number has sold “almost as much” as Germany’s traditional white home strip, Adidas spokesman Stefan Pursche told AFP.

Under normal circumstances, four out of every five shirts sold would be the home kit, but the pink change has had “exceptional” success, Pursche said.

The huge demand has made it Germany’s “best-selling away kit in history”, ahead of previous iconic green or black jerseys.

Despite initial scepticism over the away shirt’s daring palette — and some homophobic or sexist commentary about the choice of colours — the kit has been embraced by fans.

“I think it is courageous to choose such a colour,” fan Alex Mueller, 39, told AFP outside Germany’s game against Switzerland on Sunday, sporting a pink shirt received as a gift.

The shirt was out-of-stock on Adidas’s website on Monday morning, with new supplies to be put online at 08:30 GMT (10:30 in Germany) on Tuesday.

Most of the Adidas’s stores in Germany were also running very low, with only a few very small sizes or children’s models still available.

The popularity of the shirt has made it a hot commodity. Leo, 17, told AFP by Adidas’s Frankfurt shop on Friday that he would take the four pink shirts he had put his hands on to “resell on eBay” at a markup.

“They are the most difficult to get, so it’s there that I can make the biggest gains,” he said.

Sales of the pink kit could continue to rise if Germany progresses deeper into the tournament.

Julian Nagelsmann’s side sealed a first-placed finish in the group stage on Sunday with a 1-1 draw against Switzerland.

For the 2014 World Cup, Adidas sold some three million Germany shirts, with around half-a-million being sold in the days following Germany’s final victory over Argentina.

The pink strip however figures to be one of the last kits Adidas makes for their home team after decades during which the sportswear company’s three stripes were a fixture on German kits.

US rival Nike has secured the contract to outfit the German national team from 2027.

READ ALSO: ‘Lack of patriotism’ – German football team to cut ties with Adidas after 70 years

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EURO 2024

German fans dance to the tune of the ‘saxophone guy’

While Germany have sometimes struggled on the pitch at Euro 2024, a previously unknown saxophonist in a retro shirt has had more success at delighting fans and uniting the country.

German fans dance to the tune of the 'saxophone guy'

Andre Schnura has become the breakout star of the competition on social media, getting fans jumping across Germany’s host cities for the tournament.

His latest performance in front of his newly adoring public came in the Dortmund fanzone ahead of Germany’s first knockout game against Denmark on Saturday evening.

Little over two weeks ago, 30-something Schnura was a gigging saxophonist and music teacher of little or no renown.

After losing his main job at a music school where he had been giving lessons for the past six years, he decided to pick up his saxophone and follow the football around Germany.

READ ALSO: How (and where) to watch Euro 2024 games in Germany

Schnura’s interpretations of the greatest hits of the football songbook include “Freed from Desire”, “Samba de Janeiro” and “Major Tom”, a German 80s classic which has become an anthem for supporters.

Dressed in a retro Rudi Voeller kit and sunglasses, Schnura has racked up hundreds of thousands of views on social media and become an instantly recognisable character at the tournament.

“I am completely overwhelmed and infinitely grateful for what is happening right now,” Schnura wrote on Instagram after a week of high-energy performances.

Hopeful message

The “saxophone guy”, as Schnura even calls himself, has used his platform to carry a message, too.

“I want to use my five minutes of fame to remind you of something important. All eyes are still on me, but it won’t always stay that way,” Schnura said.

“We all have worries, fears and insecurities… But we all long for peace, security and love. Simply, we are all the same. I want to remind you to love and forgive one another,” he said.

The saxophonist’s message of hope has resonated with fans, many of whom have followed his performances live online.

“I think I speak for everyone when I say your vibe is doing great things for Germany and for the Euros,” one user responded.

Another said Schnura was “saving Germany with a saxophone”.

Germany may have qualified for its first quarter final in eight years, bringing some positivity back to the team, but the mood in the country is dour between a sluggish economy and an ill-tempered political debate.

The saxophone guy has not gone unnoticed by the German football association (DFB) or the tournament organisers UEFA, who have both broadcast videos of Schnura.

The musician has caught the attention of the players in the changing room, too. Gap-toothed striker and German cult icon in his own right, Niclas Fuellkrug said Schnura was “very cool”.

“Super job, Andre! Thank you for your support!” said veteran teammate Thomas Mueller.

Schnura has turned down requests for interviews, saying his “music speaks for itself”.

A petition has been started online for Schnura to appear at the final in Berlin on July 14. The musician himself has announced a tour in the autumn with seven dates called “love is the answer”.

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