CricTVC| TOP 8 AUSTRALIAN ONE DAY CRICKET UNIFORMS OF THE 80S & 90S




Here’s a list of my eight favourite Australian one-day uniforms from the 80s and 90s. Perhaps my fondness for these shirts is tinted by the canary-yellow glasses of my youth.

8. Benson and Hedges Challenge, 1987
A condensed one-off tournament in Perth pitting Australia against England, Pakistan and the West Indies, this shootout celebrated Australia’s America’s Cup defence. Both proved lost causes.


7. Whiteout, 1979-80
One-day cricket’s white album. England and the Windies were in town, but the prudish poms refused to wear coloured clothing – Derek Underwood was the only touring Englishman to have been part of Kerry Packer’s rainbow WSC cult. The tight Han Solo pants might be a dated look, but the simple colour blocking and subtle piping works. I’d swipe one of the sweaters in a heartbeat.


6. Southern Cross, 94-96
Forever immortalised by Michael Bevan’s statuesque SCG pose (and the camera crewman who wore one on the sidelines at the Super Bowl). Cricketers had long worn our nation’s coat of arms, but here the game laid claim to the Southern Cross, which is now it the heart of Cricket Australia’s brand identity.

5. Side panels, 80-84
With England out of the country, the World Series Cup went cray cray with the colour (England returned in 82-83 and in 1985 for the World Championship of Cricket but chose to wear plain all-blue uniforms). Today side panels have become a sports uniform cliché, often rammed into a jersey as an afterthought, disrupting the flow of its other graphic elements. Here they fit perfectly, syncing up sharply with the coloured pocket lining of the strides. The 80-81 iteration kept the sleeve ribbon of the previous season, but it’s the cleaner stripe-free 81-84 edition that scores the points. When people think 80s cricket, there’s a good chance this is the first look that comes to mind.


4. Bolts, 92-94
If you told me you’re going to stick lightning bolts up and down an Australian national team jersey I’d probably say it’s a bad idea. I know I shouldn’t like the 92-94 World Series Cup uniforms but I actually do – a lot. Often the country name on cricket shirts is quite meekly inscribed. Here the angled font adds some welcome attitude. Extra points go to the 92-93 version, which bore a World Series disc modelled on the 92 World Cup logo, featuring a lightning bolt zinging behind a skyward white ball.

3. Tri-hoops, 84-88
Solid and succinct, the tri-hoop design was used in the World Series Cup as well as the 1985 World Championship of Cricket, held to commemorate the Victoria’s 150th birthday. Nothing super flashy here, but it's a clean, neatly aligned design that really popped when the Windies blew open the buttons.

2. Baseball, 88-92
The flowing chest script and arched player names on the back might scream baseball, but you can’t be too sensitive when you’re playing for the ‘World Series’ Cup. Obviously taking a design leaf from abroad, the garment cut and bold horizontal stripes kept these unis in the cricket conversation. The 88-89 season shirts had a nice tactile touch, with the country names stitched-on rather than screenprinted.

1. 1992 World Cup
The strong, weighty shoulder strip made this one a standout. The top-heavy design really brought out David Boon's nuggety-ness. From memory this might have been the first national one-day shirt licensed for retail sale. No doubt this year’s replicas are fizzing out the door. But the new retros have a conventional polo cut, with the sleeve seam sitting on the shoulder point. The originals had more construction, with the stripes formed by a separate panel that curved over the shoulder, meaning they were visible when the batsman was in-stance.  Sounds like a small deal, and on the scale of global worries it probably is. But it speaks to a level of care and attentiveness to the product that is all too rarely seen in today’s licensed apparel.

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