Jump directly to the content
GETTING SHIRTY

Man Utd fans fume as ‘another 12 years of terrible kits’ is announced after club unveil new £900m deal

MANCHESTER UNITED have extended their partnership with Adidas until 2035 after agreeing a £900million deal.

The Red Devils have been kitted out by the German manufacturer since 2015, after they outbid previous suppliers Nike.

Manchester United recently unveiled their new away kit
3
Manchester United recently unveiled their new away kitCredit: Instagram @manchesterunited
Jonny Evans wore the new kit against Wrexham
3
Jonny Evans wore the new kit against WrexhamCredit: Getty

United will receive a minimum cash guarantee of £900m over the decade extension, an upgrade on the then-record £750m sum agreed in 2014.

Red Devils fans have been critical of their kits in recent years, with this season's black, red and white away strip described as "atrocious" on social media.

So amid the news that Adidas will keep on supplying United's kits until 2035, many supporters were not best pleased.

One tweeted: "Another 12 years of terrible kits then. Create some retro adidas originals kits at least."

READ MORE MAN UTD NEWS

While a second wrote: "Wow I hate adidas too. Get Nike back."

A third fan blasted: "With those ugly jerseys."

And another added: "More sh*** kits then !"

United's current deal with Adidas links annual payments to whether they have qualified for the Champions League.

According to , United's annual payment from Adidas decreases by 30 per cent of the "applicable amount" if they fail to qualify for Europe's premier competition for two or more seasons on the bounce.

United debuted their controversial new away kit during their recent US tour.

One fan wrote of it: "Never taking that even for free. Worst kit ever."

While a second fumed: "Absolutely horrendous."

MAN UTD TAKEOVER NEWS LIVE: Stay up to date with all the latest purchase and transfer news from Old Trafford

Man United's new home kit has received less criticism
3
Man United's new home kit has received less criticismCredit: Getty
Topics