The classic blue and gold. Navy blue body with the iconic yellow horizontal sash across the chest — the franja — CABJ crest centered above it, yellow Nike swoosh on the right, PEPSI sponsor in blue across the band. Yellow side panels and sleeve accents. On the back: PEPSI across the upper shoulders, a massive yellow #10, and CARLITOS in white beneath it. Goodyear on the right sleeve. Nike Total 90 tag at the collar. This is La Bombonera on a hanger.
Carlitos. That's what La 12 — the most passionate fan base in South America — called Carlos Tevez. Not his surname, not his number. Carlitos. He earned it by playing with the fury of someone who grew up in Fuerte Apache, one of the toughest neighborhoods in Buenos Aires, and fought his way to the #10 shirt at the biggest club in Argentina. In this kit, Tevez led Boca to the 2004 Copa Sudamericana title and was the heartbeat of a squad that reached the Copa Libertadores semifinals. He scored goals that made La Bombonera shake, and every touch carried the weight of a kid who played for the shirt like his life depended on it — because in a way, it did.
Before Manchester United, before Manchester City, before Juventus — there was this. The Pepsi-era Boca jersey with CARLITOS on the back is one of the most emotionally charged shirts in all of South American football.
Size: L
The classic blue and gold. Navy blue body with the iconic yellow horizontal sash across the chest — the franja — CABJ crest centered above it, yellow Nike swoosh on the right, PEPSI sponsor in blue across the band. Yellow side panels and sleeve accents. On the back: PEPSI across the upper shoulders, a massive yellow #10, and CARLITOS in white beneath it. Goodyear on the right sleeve. Nike Total 90 tag at the collar. This is La Bombonera on a hanger.
Carlitos. That's what La 12 — the most passionate fan base in South America — called Carlos Tevez. Not his surname, not his number. Carlitos. He earned it by playing with the fury of someone who grew up in Fuerte Apache, one of the toughest neighborhoods in Buenos Aires, and fought his way to the #10 shirt at the biggest club in Argentina. In this kit, Tevez led Boca to the 2004 Copa Sudamericana title and was the heartbeat of a squad that reached the Copa Libertadores semifinals. He scored goals that made La Bombonera shake, and every touch carried the weight of a kid who played for the shirt like his life depended on it — because in a way, it did.
Before Manchester United, before Manchester City, before Juventus — there was this. The Pepsi-era Boca jersey with CARLITOS on the back is one of the most emotionally charged shirts in all of South American football.
Size: L