Classic Oranje orange with a fold-down polo collar trimmed in light blue, black Nike swoosh on the right chest, the KNVB lion crest on the left, and a bold black #10 front and center. NEDERLAND stamped in black along the bottom hem. On the back, LA-LA-LA arched in black above a massive black #10. Nike Total 90 branding near the lower back hem. Clean, minimal, unmistakably Dutch.
This is a special one. The "La-La-La" name on the back is a nod to the iconic 2006 World Cup anthem — the chant that soundtracked that entire summer in Germany. The Netherlands wore this kit during the 2006 World Cup campaign where they were grouped with Argentina, Ivory Coast, and Serbia & Montenegro. The Dutch advanced from the group but fell to Portugal in a brutal Round of 16 match — the infamous "Battle of Nuremberg" that saw 16 yellow cards and 4 reds. The #10 belonged to Ruud van Nistelrooy that tournament, but with the "La-La-La" customization, this jersey is less about a single player and more about the culture — the party, the orange smoke, the traveling Dutch fans who turned every host city into a sea of Oranje. It's a fan jersey in the truest sense, a wearable piece of World Cup atmosphere.
You don't see these often. A 2006 Netherlands home kit with the anthem on the back — pure nostalgia from that German summer.
Size: L
Classic Oranje orange with a fold-down polo collar trimmed in light blue, black Nike swoosh on the right chest, the KNVB lion crest on the left, and a bold black #10 front and center. NEDERLAND stamped in black along the bottom hem. On the back, LA-LA-LA arched in black above a massive black #10. Nike Total 90 branding near the lower back hem. Clean, minimal, unmistakably Dutch.
This is a special one. The "La-La-La" name on the back is a nod to the iconic 2006 World Cup anthem — the chant that soundtracked that entire summer in Germany. The Netherlands wore this kit during the 2006 World Cup campaign where they were grouped with Argentina, Ivory Coast, and Serbia & Montenegro. The Dutch advanced from the group but fell to Portugal in a brutal Round of 16 match — the infamous "Battle of Nuremberg" that saw 16 yellow cards and 4 reds. The #10 belonged to Ruud van Nistelrooy that tournament, but with the "La-La-La" customization, this jersey is less about a single player and more about the culture — the party, the orange smoke, the traveling Dutch fans who turned every host city into a sea of Oranje. It's a fan jersey in the truest sense, a wearable piece of World Cup atmosphere.
You don't see these often. A 2006 Netherlands home kit with the anthem on the back — pure nostalgia from that German summer.
Size: L