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- Tamworth FC
Tamworth FC was established in 1933, replacing an older team that had folded called Tamworth Castle FC. The club’s nickname is ‘The Lambs’, which at first seems a bit confusing given that there are no sheep on the badge (my mind immediately went to Derby’s ram and I was looking for something similar). However, the name actually comes from the Lamb Inn pub, which once stood next to the ground and doubled as the clubhouse and changing rooms in the early days. The ground today is still called the Lamb Ground – adding to the irony, as it was built on land that was once a pig farm. But hey-ho, I won’t bleat on about it. Starting from the top, the gold on blue ‘Saltire in Chief’ derives from the arms of the Kingdom of Mercia. When the Anglo-Saxon King Offa came to the throne of Mercia in 757 AD, he made Tamworth his chief residence and built a palace there. This is significant, as Mercia was one of the largest and most powerful Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, even overshadowing my hometown kingdom, East Anglia (where King Raedwald had been buried at Sutton Hoo about 100 years before King Offa settled in Tamworth). So, it’s quite a claim: Tamworth was the capital of one of the greatest ‘empires’ England has ever seen within its borders. The patterned horizontal band (known as a Fess of Vair, apparently) originates from the arms of the Marmion family, who were the Lords of Tamworth from 1014 to 1291. They had come over with the Norman invaders (1066 and all that), and as such, this reflects a nice narrative chronology – the Saxons were eventually replaced by the invading Normans. The badge continues this theme with the castle and crossed swords. The Normans, as occupiers of Saxon lands, built castles called Motte-and-Baileys – quickly constructed wooden fortifications atop mounds made from the earth dug to create the moat. In effect, these operated rather like FOBs (Forward Operating Bases) used by British and American forces in Afghanistan! From these medieval FOBs, Norman soldiers could venture out to quell Saxon uprisings, collect taxes, and administer justice. Tamworth Castle’s Motte and Bailey was built in 1070 on top of the ruins of Offa’s former palace – a logical place to base oneself when seeking to dominate the region. The castle was given to Robert Despenser, whose surname came from his role as ‘Dispenser’ (or Royal Steward) for William of Normandy. Essentially, Robert was William the Conqueror’s butler, and Tamworth was his reward as part of the spoils of war. The castle was later upgraded to stone and still stands in the middle of the town today (Google it – it’s a beauty!). Six centuries later, it briefly featured in the English Civil War when it was held by Royalist soldiers who capitulated after a two-day siege by Parliamentarian forces in 1643. The Staffordshire Knot is another icon on the badge. It is the traditional symbol of the county of Stafford, where Tamworth is located. Legend has it that the knot symbol originated when an innovative hangman at Stafford Gaol solved an argument over which of three prisoners should be hanged first by coming up with this knot, which could hang all three men simultaneously. However, the knot’s image actually predates Stafford Gaol and was used by Offa’s Mercian kingdom in some of their heraldry. The knot is also on the coat of arms of the county of Stafford. At the base of the badge sits the French ‘Fleur-de-lys’, which is also found on the Tamworth Council badge, though I cannot trace its exact origins. I would assume it refers to the Norman origins of Robert Despenser. Regardless, this is a fantastic badge, rich in medieval heritage. I certainly hope every history teacher within a hundred miles of Tamworth explains this badge to their students – it covers almost the entire Year 7 History curriculum in one go!
- Portsmouth FC
I’ve written quite a few of these #GetTheBadgeIn posts before and usually the best and most interesting football crests involve those packed with symbolism and meaning. Usually when teams still use variations of their home town’s coat of arms. However. In Portsmouth we have an unusual one. A team with a relatively simple icon – but that can spawn a dozen or so historical theories as it would appear that the jury is a little out on its origins. So, let’s dive in and see what we can discover about Pompey… Portsmouth Football Club was founded in 1898, born out of the collapse of Royal Artillery F.C., a side suspended by the FA for breaking the amateur code. Out of that vacuum came the new professional Portsmouth FC, formed in the office of Alderman J.E. Pink at the instigation of John Brickwood, the local brewer. Their first ground was Fratton Park, built on farmland, and it remains their home to this day. From salmon pink shirts with claret trim – which earned them the nickname The Shrimps – they shifted to white and navy, before finally adopting the now famous blue shirts in 1913, coupled with patriotic red socks in the 1930s. From then on, they were the Blues, a name chanted to this day. The badge of Portsmouth FC is rooted in the city’s arms: the star and crescent. Simple in appearance, yet layered with centuries of history. Some argue it derives from Richard the Lionheart, whose Great Seal in the 1190s featured a star and crescent, a mark of his crusading zeal and perhaps even a punning nod to the star Regulus in the constellation of Leo – “Cor Leonis”, the Heart of the Lion. Others link it to William de Longchamp, Richard’s chancellor, who bore a similar device. Another theory traces it further back, to Isaac Comnenus of Cyprus, who fought Richard before losing his banner – itself marked by a crescent and star – to the English king. There are even references to King Stephen’s seal, which bore a seven-pointed star alongside a crescent decades earlier. In truth, the star and crescent stretch back to Byzantium, where a moonlit victory in 339 BC led the city to adopt the crescent of Artemis, later joined by the Virgin Mary’s star, and eventually absorbed into Ottoman heraldry. By the time Richard granted Portsmouth its first charter in 1194, the symbol was firmly attached to the town. For the city, the star and crescent came to represent royal favour, naval importance, and civic identity. The club adopted it in 1909, stitching it proudly to their shirts, and it has remained their mark ever since. The motto Heaven’s Light Our Guide was added in 1929, borrowed from the Order of the Star of India and fittingly displayed on troopships that sailed through Portsmouth on imperial routes. For Pompey, it linked the badge directly to Britain’s naval heart. And what a naval heart it is. Portsmouth’s association with the Royal Navy is unrivalled. The city’s Historic Dockyard today houses three of the greatest warships in British history: HMS Victory, Nelson’s flagship at Trafalgar; HMS Warrior, the revolutionary ironclad that once embodied Victorian naval might; and the Mary Rose, Henry VIII’s warship raised from the seabed and painstakingly preserved. Together they form a heritage site without equal – a living museum of maritime power and innovation. For me, there is no bigger and better collection of national heritage anywhere in the UK. On the pitch, Portsmouth’s history is as proud as their crest. Twice champions of England, in 1949 and 1950, they enjoyed their golden era in the years after the war. They have also lifted the FA Cup twice, in 1939 and memorably in 2008, when Harry Redknapp’s side – with the likes of Sol Campbell, Jermain Defoe and Nwankwo Kanu – brought silverware to Fratton Park once more. Though the years since have been turbulent, with financial crises and relegations, Pompey remain resilient, their fans’ loyalty a mirror of the city’s character. And then there is the name: Pompey. No one knows quite where it comes from. Some say it was the name of a captured French warship, Le Pompee, later berthed in the harbour. Others link it to drunken sailors interrupting a lecture on the Roman general Pompey with a cry of “Poor old Pompey!” There’s the tale of sailors climbing Pompey’s Pillar in Alexandria in 1781, or of naval charts abbreviating Portsmouth Point as “Pom. P.” Still others point to the firemen (pompiers), or simply naval slang. What we do know is that by 1901, “Play up Pompey” was already being sung on the terraces, making it the oldest documented football chant in the English game. So, what makes Portsmouth’s badge stand out? It is deceptively simple: an eight-pointed star above a crescent moon. But within that simplicity lies Byzantium, Cyprus, Richard the Lionheart, naval power, and civic pride. Few badges carry such a breadth of history in such a clean design. And when stitched onto a Pompey shirt at Fratton Park, it’s not just a star and a moon – it’s the heart of a city.
- Sri Lankan National Cricket Team
When Sri Lanka walk out to play cricket, they do so under one of the most distinctive national flags in the world. The flag of Sri Lanka, formally adopted in 1951 is packed with meaning. At its heart lies a golden lion, standing proud on a crimson field, clutching a kastane sword. The kastane is a traditional short sword of Sri Lanka, richly decorated with gems and a lion-headed hilt, long associated with nobility and authority. In the flag, the sword symbolises sovereignty and the defence of freedom. Around the lion sit four golden bo leaves, drawn from the sacred Bodhi tree under which the Buddha achieved enlightenment. They represent the four key Buddhist virtues of loving-kindness, compassion, sympathetic joy, and equanimity. On either side of the lion are two coloured panels: saffron and green. The saffron panel represents the Tamil community, most of whom follow Hinduism, though there are also Christian Tamils. Their presence in Sri Lanka dates back centuries, with migrations from southern India shaping the island’s language, religion, and culture. The green panel represents the Muslim community, descendants of Arab traders who settled on the island from the 8th century onwards, marrying into local families and building thriving mercantile towns. The flag’s golden border ties these communities together, expressing the aspiration of harmony amidst diversity. The cricket badge itself takes its central cue from the flag. The lion, sword raised, dominates the crest of the Sri Lanka national cricket team. Its roots reach into legend: the Mahavamsa chronicle tells how Prince Vijaya, an exiled Indian prince, landed on the island around the 5th century BCE. The story claimed he was descended from a lion, a symbol that became the emblem of Sinhalese identity. Through kingdoms and invasions, Portuguese forts and British plantations, the lion endured as a marker of courage and sovereignty. Today, it roars from the cricket shirt, symbolising not just the Sinhalese majority but the defiance of the island as a whole. Sri Lanka’s setting makes this symbolism all the more powerful. A jewel in the Indian Ocean, the island is famed for its palm-fringed beaches where sea turtles nest, its lush jungles echoing with the calls of birds and monkeys, and its elephants that remain central to cultural life and religious festivals. From the tea-carpeted hills of Kandy to the ancient cities of Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa, Sri Lanka’s natural and cultural landscapes shape a unique sense of place. Cricket thrives against this backdrop, played on grounds that look out onto coastlines, mountains, and forests. The country’s modern history, however, has been far from tranquil. Independence from Britain in 1948 was followed by rising ethnic tensions between the Sinhalese majority and the Tamil minority. These erupted into a devastating civil war in 1983, as the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fought for an independent Tamil homeland in the north and east of the island. The conflict lasted nearly three decades and ended in 2009, leaving deep scars but also a determination to rebuild and reconcile. Throughout those difficult years, cricket often offered the country a sense of unity. The most vivid example came in 1996, when Arjuna Ranatunga led Sri Lanka to an unlikely World Cup victory, defeating giants of the game and bringing the trophy to Colombo. It was a moment of national pride shared across ethnic and religious divides. In later years, the artistry of Muttiah Muralitharan – himself a Tamil – became a symbol of how cricket could transcend the island’s divisions. Alongside him, players like Sanath Jayasuriya, Kumar Sangakkara, and Mahela Jayawardene turned the lion badge into a mark of excellence and resilience. For Sri Lanka, cricket is not just a sport but a cultural expression. The flag, with its lion, bo leaves, sword, and colours, embodies the diversity and struggles of the nation, and its badge channels centuries of myth and memory. In every run scored and every wicket taken, the lion roars again, reminding the world that this small island – rich in beauty, shaped by history, scarred by war, and bound together by sport – continues to find its clearest expression of identity on the cricket field.
- Pakistan National Cricket Team
When Pakistan takes to the cricket field, they carry with them far more than bats and balls. They carry a story bound up with the flag that was raised in 1947 at the birth of the nation. Adopted on 11 August 1947, days before independence, the flag was designed by Syed Amir-uddin Kedwaii and drew directly from the banner of the All-India Muslim League. Its green field symbolises Islam, the faith of the majority, while the white stripe represents religious minorities, embodying Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s vision for a state where all communities could live with dignity. The crescent moon captures the idea of progress, or a new dawn, and is, of course, an emblem of Islam. The five-pointed star stands for the five pillars of the Islamic faith, but it also has older roots, dating back to Ancient Mesopotamia where, alongside the crescent, it symbolised the god Ishtar – a deity of fertility, love, and war. Pakistan itself was born out of the Partition of British India, a traumatic but defining event of the 20th century. The nation was created as a homeland for South Asia’s Muslims, and from the outset its rivalry with India has shaped both geopolitics and sport. While their contest is played out on the world stage of diplomacy and security, it is most fiercely and passionately felt on the cricket pitch, where every Pakistan v India match becomes more than a game. This is amplified by the country’s remarkable diversity: from the mountain peaks of the Karakoram, to the fertile Punjab plains, to the deserts of Sindh and the ancient traditions and natural beauty of Balochistan. Pakistan’s cricket team is drawn from these varied cultures and geographies, becoming a rare unifying force in a country of many identities. The badge of the Pakistan cricket team itself takes this symbolism further. Unlike many national teams that adopt animals, crests, or elaborate emblems, Pakistan’s badge is strikingly simple: a golden star, often inscribed with “Pakistan” in Urdu. It is minimal but powerful, echoing the flag itself. That star has become iconic, recognised across the cricketing world. From Imran Khan lifting the World Cup in Melbourne in 1992, to Babar Azam leading the team today, the star has always remained central. After gaining Test status in 1952, the Pakistan national cricket team quickly made a name for themselves with their fearless batting and ferocious pace bowling. Their greatest triumph, as already alluded to, came with the 1992 World Cup victory under Imran Khan, forever linked with his famous call for his players to become “cornered tigers.” Later glories followed with the T20 World Cup in 2009 and the Champions Trophy in 2017. Alongside these achievements stand the names of legends: Hanif Mohammad, the master who carried the early hopes of the team; the fearsome fast-bowling triumvirate of Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, and Shoaib Akhtar; and the artistry of Inzamam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Yousuf, and Babar Azam. The team’s nicknames – the Shaheens (The falcons), the Green Shirts, the Cornered Tigers – all draw on imagery of pride, identity, and survival. In victory and in defeat, the flag and the badge stand as reminders that cricket in Pakistan is not just a sport but a cultural force, a binding agent for a nation that has endured partition, conflict, and constant change.
- Woking FC
Woking Football Club’s badge is an elegant beauty of a badge - it is a direct lift from the borough’s coat of arms and represent a tapestry of English history. Every symbol on the crest tells part of the story of the Royal Manor of Woking and the powerful figures who once held it. At its heart, and neatly creating the quarters, lies the cross of Edward the Confessor, one of England’s most revered monarchs and the last major Saxon King. Edward’s connection marks Woking as a royal manor in Saxon times the borough motto, Fide et Diligentia — By Faith and Diligence — echoes this spiritual foundation and Edward’s pious outlook. It was however Edward’s death that sparked the succession crisis that led to the Battle of Hastings and the coming of the Norman age. The bold red and gold colours of the badge were taken from the arms of the Bassett family. This noble family was awarded the manor by King John in the early 13th century. On the death of Aliva Bassett in 1281, Woking passed to her son, Hugh le Despenser, and from his family crest came the frets (the waffle looking criss-cross things) that appear in the second and third quarters of the arms. Their emblem appears in the badge’s second and third quarters. Hugh Despenser the Elder became a close advisor to Edward II, while his son, Hugh the Younger, rose even higher – but the fall was to be worse.. Hugh Despenser the Younger met a gruesome end in 1326 after Queen Isabella and her ally Roger Mortimer invaded England to overthrow her husband, Edward II. Despenser, hated for his greed and cruelty as the king’s favourite, was captured and subjected to one of the most brutal executions of the Middle Ages: he was dragged through the streets, hanged, cut down while still alive, disembowelled, and finally quartered, with his body parts sent around the country as a warning. His father, Hugh the Elder, was also executed. Edward II was forced to abdicate soon after in favour of his young son, Edward III, and he never returned to power, dying in captivity the following year — leaving the Despensers remembered not only for their ambition but for their spectacular and bloody downfall. Woking’s story then moves into the 15th century, when the manor passed to the Beaufort family. Their fleur-de-lis decorates the first and fourth quarters of the shield. The Beaufort’s were direct descendants of John of Gaunt who in turn was linked to the Plantagenets of the William the Conqueror. It was from within this family that Lady Margaret Beaufort — the mother of Henry VII —helped establish the Tudor dynasty. Woking Palace, built on the banks of the River Wey, became one of Henry VII’s favourite retreats. It was here in 1490 that he signed the Treaty of Woking with Maximilian of Austria, pledging to resist French dominance in Europe. Henry VIII later expanded the palace into a lavish residence, using it regularly for hunting, celebrations, and state business. The Beaufort fleur-de-lis on the badge is therefore a symbol of Woking’s role in the dawn of the Tudor age. The Beaufort connection also links to Cardinal Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester and one of the most powerful men in 15th-century England. From Edward the Confessor’s cross to the Beaufort fleur-de-lis, the badge carries a weight of royal and religious symbolism that few clubs can match. Woking’s nickname, “The Cards,” stems directly from this heraldic tradition. A shortening of “Cardinals,” it nods both to the scarlet robes of Cardinal Henry Beaufort and to the club’s red shirts. Only a handful of English football badges carry so many levels of English History within its symbolism – and Woking’s does it in a beautifully symmetrical and modern way – despite being steeped in Medieval history. This town to the South of London has a very deep and hidden history in the affairs of England – and on the pitch their team is battling their up the leagues to tell a new story.
- Blackburn Rovers FC
Blackburn Rovers were founded in 1875 by a group of young men at the St Leger Hotel in Blackburn, Lancashire. At a time when football was just beginning to professionalise, they took the word “Rovers” to signal a club that was not tied to one pitch or set of facilities, but free to play wherever grounds could be found. Dozens of teams of that era used names like Rovers, Wanderers, or Ramblers for the same reason — they were literally roving football clubs, before permanent homes were built. The town of Blackburn itself was one of the beating hearts of the Industrial Revolution. Once a quiet Lancashire settlement, by the 18th and 19th centuries it had exploded into a powerhouse of cotton weaving and textile mills. Its smoke-filled skyline, factory whistles, and rows of terraced houses made it a symbol of Victorian industry. But the town was also infamous for hardship: dangerous working conditions, slum housing, and strikes. Football emerged here, as in so many mill towns, as the game of working people. Factory teams and church clubs offered recreation and identity to communities who worked long hours in the looms. The Rovers quickly rose to prominence. In the 1880s, they became one of the first clubs to challenge the dominance of southern amateur sides. They won the FA Cup five times between 1884 and 1891, cementing Blackburn as one of football’s original powerhouses. In 1888, they were also one of the founding members of the Football League, giving them a central role in shaping the professional game. Let’s get to their badge then. Simple. Elegant. Steeped in local pride. The centrepiece is the red rose of Lancashire, one of England’s most historic symbols. It dates back to the Wars of the Roses in the 15th century, when the House of Lancaster, represented by the red rose, fought for control of the throne against the House of York, whose emblem was the white rose. Though centuries have passed, the red rose remains the emblem of Lancashire, carried proudly on civic coats of arms, county flags, and local institutions. When Blackburn line up, as they so often do, against Yorkshire’s heavy hitters such as Sheffield and Leeds – that centuries old civil war plays out on the pitch all over again. Beneath the rose sits the club’s Latin motto: Arte et Labore — “By Skill and Hard Work.” It is the official motto of Blackburn’s borough, reflecting both the textile craft of its people and the relentless labour that defined their lives. The simple blue-and-white halved shirts that the Rovers still wear today are among the most classic in English football, unchanged for over a century. The team’s modern high point came in the 1990s, when Jack Walker, a local steel magnate, invested his fortune in the club. Walker has grown up in Blackburn, starting life as an apprentice sheet metal worker at 13. He served in the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers and then took over the family sheet metal business. He turned it into one of the giants of British industry – selling it for a then record of £360m to British Steel in 1992. The company however continued with other operations such as ‘British European’ airways which became low-cost operator Flybe. Walker was a true Lancashire success story – and his achievements soon came to be reflected on the pitch. Under manager Kenny Dalglish and powered by striker Alan Shearer, the Rovers won the Premier League title in 1995, an astonishing achievement for a club from a modest industrial town. That triumph remains one of English football’s most romantic stories. Blackburn Rovers are cotton looms and red roses, Victorian factories and Jack Walker’s steel fortune, Alan Shearer’s goals and one of the most iconic Premier League teams in history – despite falling from grace in recent years. Their badge is not just a flower but a reminder of a county’s heritage and a town that bloomed in industry, laboured for its place, and still clings proudly to its footballing roots.
- Wycombe Wanderers
In America you have ‘The Steelers’, ‘Wildfire’, ‘Thunderhawk’s’, ‘Red Tide’… in England we take a slightly different approach. Wycombe are known as the the Chairboys. Chair. Boys. Boys who make chairs. Fearsome. Wycombe even has a chair museum. Google reviews say it is awful. It sounds incredible to me. Not one to sit out, I’d imagine. And then there is the badge. It has a swan on it. Nothing to do with a chair. So why the heck aren’t they called the Swans? So, let’s take a look and #GetTheBadgeIn. Let’s start with that Swan. And, interestingly, it again (like Newport County’s badge) links back to the bloody 1st Duke of Buckingham (he was the one who fought with Henry V and supposedly tried to kill Joan of Arc once they had captured her in the 100 Years War). His shield was the chevron – but he also appears to have adopted the Swan as his symbol. But why? … the jury is out a bit, but there are two possible theories – and maybe they’re both true. Firstly, the Swan links back to an old myth, called the Knight of the Swan. This story first appears written down in 1192. Essentially it involves a French King who had seven children, all of whom were born with a chain around their neck, and all of whom – bar one – turned later in a Swan. What they were smoking in Medieval France is another matter. That said, the story was picked up and adopted by Buckingham’s family line, who claimed to be descendants of the surviving child in the story. More likely – but no reason why it can’t also be true – is that one of Buckingham’s ancestors was related to a Viking called Sweyn (there was a Viking King of England called Sweyn Forkbeard – who was father of King Canute). In true British fashion again, this Mr Sweyn, adopted the Swan image as a pun on his name. (Port Vale also have a pun in their crest – their scythe is a reference to the Sneyd family (the handle of a scythe is called a sned). So that’s the swan. A local Viking who adopted the symbol as a pun and then later it fell nicely into a French fairy tale. Ok, so what about this nickname? The Chairboys. Wycombe’s chair-making heritage dates back hundreds of years, with local craftsmen producing up to a staggering 4,700 chairs a day at the industry’s height in the 1800s. In Wycombe, long before mass production, skilled chair-makers known as "bodgers" crafted chair legs by hand, shaping wood with remarkable speed and precision. Their artistry helped establish Wycombe as the “chair capital” of Britain. They specialised in making ‘Windsor Chairs’ (Google them – you’ll have sat on one, you probably own one). Wycombe is perfectly located next to a) the Chiltern hills with a lot of high quality Beech woodland (Beech make excellent chair legs) and b) it is on the road between London and Oxford (both academics and politicians spend a lot of time sitting, I guess) so demand was high. With the industrial revolution the industry got a major boost and by the mid-19th century, Wycombe's bustling workshops produced 4,700 chairs daily, making high-quality, affordable furniture for homes, schools, and churches across Britain. In 1877, the town celebrated Queen Victoria's visit with a grand arch made entirely of chairs, which I assume must have been a first for the Queen. But then the chair makers are fond of their strange traditions. Today the city still holds a public ‘weigh in’ and ‘weighing out’ ceremony for their mayor, to see if they gained weight at the expense of the public purse. This should be rolled out nationwide in my opinion. The football team itself was formed in 1887 after a meeting of furniture workers at the Steam Engine pub on Station Road, High Wycombe. It’s likely that they adopted "Wanderers" after the Wanderers team, winners of the first FA Cup in 1872. So that’s Wycombe for you then. Steeped in historical swans and Viking puns. A proper north London working man’s club. Proud of their local Buckinghamshire and its roots in England’s Viking past, with an eccentric passion for a niche industry and craft they came to dominate. Proud to stand on their own, perfectly crafted, four legs.
- LA Clippers
The Los Angeles Clippers began life far from Hollywood. Founded as the Buffalo Braves in 1970, they played in upstate New York before moving to San Diego in 1978. There, the franchise rebranded as the Clippers, named after the fast, elegant clipper ships that once sailed into San Diego Bay during the 19th century. These ships were the pride of maritime engineering — tall-masted vessels designed for speed, carrying goods and people across oceans at record pace. Tall ships like these cut through San Diego’s waters during the California Gold Rush (1848–1855) and the Pacific trade boom that followed. Clippers ferried prospectors, settlers, and supplies up the coast toward San Francisco, using San Diego’s deep natural harbour as a safe anchorage. They also carried luxury goods — tea, coffee, spices, silks — from Asia, and returned eastward with California grain, lumber, and hides. To the world, clippers were symbols of speed, ambition, and global connection. For San Diego, they represented the moment the city became tied into an international trading network. Naming the team after them in 1978 tied modern basketball to that proud maritime legacy. San Diego’s maritime ties made the name resonate even more. The city’s harbour had long been a naval stronghold, with Naval Base San Diego growing into the U.S. Pacific Fleet’s principal homeport. The sight of warships anchored in the bay, alongside memories of the tall clippers that once glided across its waters, gave the franchise a distinct naval and nautical identity. But in 1984, controversy struck. Owner Donald Sterling orchestrated a sudden and unauthorised move up the coast to Los Angeles, a relocation later deemed illegal by the NBA. Though the league eventually allowed the move, many San Diegans felt betrayed, stripped of a team whose name and logo had been designed for their bay. In LA, the Clippers struggled for decades to find an identity in the shadow of the Lakers, sharing the Forum and later Staples Center, but never matching their success. The Clippers’ badge still carries a clear link to their maritime roots: On the hull of the ship you can see the seams of a basketball. A compass rose frames the design. Above it rises the ship’s tower, shaped to echo both the sleek prow of a modern yacht and the three stacked sails of an old clipper ship, a nod to San Diego Bay, where vessels like this once littered the horizon. On the court, the Clippers endured decades of struggle, their move to LA defined by losing seasons and poor management. But in the 2010s, they reinvented themselves. With Chris Paul, Blake Griffin, and DeAndre Jordan, the “Lob City” era electrified fans with dunks and swagger, proving the Clippers could finally compete. Though titles eluded them, they changed the franchise’s reputation. The modern Clippers, led by Kawhi Leonard and Paul George, are focused on rewriting history. Their upcoming move into their own home — the Intuit Dome in Inglewood (2024) — marks a symbolic break from the Lakers’ shadow. For the first time, the Clippers will have a stage that is theirs alone, a new harbour for a franchise long adrift.
- Minnesota Vikings
When the NFL expanded to Minneapolis–St. Paul in 1961, the franchise needed a name that reflected the people of the Upper Midwest. So, let’s #GetTheBadgeIn and uncover what lies beneath their choice…. The choice — the Vikings — was perfect. It honoured the region’s Scandinavian heritage, a population of Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, and Finnish immigrants who had settled across Minnesota in the 19th century. With their reputation for toughness, exploration, and resilience, the Vikings became a fitting symbol for a cold-weather team from the “Land of 10,000 Lakes.” The horned helmet logo and battle-cry culture tied the new team to both Norse legend and Minnesota identity. Minnesota’s story helps explain why “Vikings” resonated. The state had been home to Dakota and Ojibwe peoples for centuries before European arrival. French fur traders first established posts along the rivers in the 17th century. In the 1800s, waves of Scandinavian immigrants came, drawn by farmland that reminded them of home. By the turn of the 20th century, towns across Minnesota echoed with Nordic surnames, Lutheran churches, and traditions like lutefisk dinners and Midsummer festivals. Lutefisk, still found in church basements and small-town diners across the state, is a Norwegian dish made from dried whitefish that has been soaked in lye, then rehydrated and baked. Its strong smell and gelatinous texture divide opinion, but for many Minnesotans of Nordic descent it remains a holiday staple — a taste of the old country preserved in the new. It does tend to divide opinion. The Scandinavian presence can also be read on the map. St. Olaf, Lindström, Ulen, Fosston, Oslo, Karlstad, and Norseland are just a few of the Minnesota communities with names that reflect Norwegian and Swedish origins. In fact, Lindström was so proud of its Swedish roots that road signs at its city limits were printed in both English and Swedish until recently. These names, like the Vikings’ own, are reminders that Minnesota’s landscape was shaped by people who brought their language, culture, and toughness with them. The state itself grew on agriculture, lumber, and milling. Minneapolis became known as the “Flour Milling Capital of the World,” thanks to the power of the Mississippi River and companies like Pillsbury and General Mills. St. Paul thrived as a river and railroad hub. Later, the economy diversified into iron mining, manufacturing, and corporate giants — 3M, Target (The Timberwolves’s stadium is called The Target Center), General Mills, and Best Buy all trace their roots to Minnesota. On the field, the Vikings became known for toughness. Under coach Bud Grant in the late 1960s and 1970s, they fielded dominant teams, led by quarterback Fran Tarkenton and the fearsome “Purple People Eaters” defensive line. They reached the Super Bowl four times in that era (IV, VIII, IX, XI), though they never captured the Lombardi Trophy. Later stars like Cris Carter, Randy Moss, and Adrian Peterson kept the Vikings competitive and gave the franchise some of the most exciting players in NFL history. Their home today is U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, a glassy, angular structure designed to reflect Nordic architecture opened in 2016. It has already hosted a Super Bowl (LII in 2018), the NCAA Final Four, and concerts that tie Minnesota’s sporting stage to its musical heritage — from Bob Dylan to Prince. And then there’s the Skol chant. “Skol” is a Scandinavian toast, meaning “cheers” or “good health,” used when raising a glass among friends. For the Vikings, it became a rallying cry. Inspired by Icelandic soccer fans’ “Viking clap,” the Skol chant was introduced in 2016 and quickly became the team’s signature. Before kickoff, thousands of fans clap slowly in unison, arms raised, chanting “Skoooool!” as the tempo builds. It’s both Norse battle cry and Minnesota welcome, uniting fans in a ritual that ties football to cultural roots and creates one of the most intimidating atmospheres in the NFL. The Minnesota Vikings are more than a football team. They are Scandinavian grit, Midwestern resilience bundled up in purple pride. Their name connects immigrant heritage to modern sport, their stadium is a Longship set on the prairie, and their fans — clad in horns and roaring the Skol chant — carry centuries of toughness into every Sunday.
- York City Home Kit 25-26
“Take my money” is often a comment on social media when a fantastic new kit launches – this is one of them. The 2025/26 York City home shirt – unveiled at the Jorvik Viking Centre, the new Hummel design weaves together football, history, and identity. Every thread calls back to York’s past as Jórvík – the Viking stronghold, the jewel of the Danelaw, and the battleground of kings. When the Great Heathen Army captured York in 866, the city became the capital of Viking England. From there, it was ruled by Scandinavian warlords and remembered in sagas sung across the North Sea. This new shirt is steeped in that heritage. Woven into the fabric is a subtle Viking pattern, with longships hidden in the weave, echoing the sails that once crowded the Humber and Ouse. The collar and cuffs are white, tipped with red and blue to form the colours of York City, blending modern identity with ancient roots. Beneath the collar, a custom rune-script boat spells out “YORK” in the language of the Norse, a detail that mirrors the carved runes still found in the city’s archaeology. And, of course, the White Rose sits proudly in the corner, a county emblem linking past and present. This is more than a kit. It’s a saga you can wear. York’s Viking story is a roll call of legends. Ragnar Lothbrok – whether man or myth – met his end in Northumbria at the hands of King Aella, sparking his sons’ revenge and the creation of Jórvík. Erik Bloodaxe, ruthless and ambitious, sat on York’s throne a century later, remembered in the sagas as brooding in a rain-soaked hall beside his queen, Gunnhild. Yet it was Harald Hardrada, the ‘Harsh Ruler’, who brought the saga of Viking York to its dramatic conclusion. By 1066, York while still technically part of Saxon England, its loyalties were still uncertain. With Edward the Confessor dead and no clear heir, the north once more looked like fertile ground for Scandinavian ambition. Enter Harald Hardrada of Norway – giant of a man, soldier of the Varangian Guard, and the last great Viking. He had seen the palaces of Constantinople, fought battles across distant lands, and returned home hardened as both warrior and ruler. When England’s throne lay vacant, Hardrada saw his chance. In September 1066, Hardrada sailed into the Humber with 300 longships, each crammed with warriors and ambition. He was joined by Tostig Godwinson, brother of Harold, the English king. Tostig, once earl of Northumbria, promised that York’s lords would rally to their cause. The calculation wasn’t far-fetched – York had been a Viking base for two centuries, its people still spoke Norse alongside English, and the north often felt closer to Scandinavia than to London. On 20 September, Hardrada and Tostig proved their strength at the Battle of Fulford, crushing the English forces sent to oppose them. York prepared to submit, hostages were gathered, and the city seemed set to become a Viking capital once again. But fate turned at Stamford Bridge (not that one…). On 25 September, as Hardrada’s army waited in the heat for York’s hostages, many warriors set aside their mail shirts. Instead of a surrendering delegation, they saw a dust cloud on the horizon – the army of King Harold Godwinson, who had force-marched nearly 200 miles from London in just four days. The battle was savage. Legend tells of a lone Viking holding the bridge, cutting down attacker after attacker until he was brought down from beneath (ouch). Hardrada, towering above his men, led from the front. But an arrow to the throat felled him where he stood, and with his death, the Viking era in England came to an end. Tostig died beside him. Of the 300 longships that had sailed into the Humber, only 24 returned. The dream of a Norse kingdom in England died that day at Stamford Bridge. Three weeks later, Harold Godwinson himself would fall at Hastings to William of Normandy, and York, like the rest of England, would be drawn into the Norman age. But York’s story remained one of resilience. From Ragnar’s prophecy, to Bloodaxe’s bloody reign, to Hardrada’s doomed gamble, the city was at the centre of battles that shaped England. Once the capital of the Danelaw – a land apart where Viking law thrived – it is now the home of York City FC, carrying forward the same stubborn, fighting spirit. This new Hummel shirt captures that story in thread and stitch. Longboats shimmer in the fabric, runes mark the back, and the White Rose sits with pride. Just as Viking jewellery once displayed wealth and identity in Jórvík, so too does this shirt declare who York City FC are today. When the Minstermen take to the pitch in red this season, they do so carrying a history of longboats, kings, battles, and a city that never surrendered its spirit.
- Sheffield United Football Club
Sheffield United Football Club – “The Blades” – are not just one of England's most famous and iconic teams, but a symbol of a city whose very identity has been forged in steel. Since their founding in 1889, playing home matches at Bramall Lane, the club and the city have been the beating heart of Yorkshire. Together they share a history of grit, invention, and enterprise that has cut through to shape the world. Sheffield United were formed on 22 March 1889 by members of the Sheffield United Cricket Club. Sheffield’s reputation as the home of cutlery and edge tools was already well established centuries before, hence “The Blades” – a nickname interestingly first adopted by cross-city rivals Wednesday, until they became “The Owls”. The Blades nickname reflects not only local craftsmanship but pride in a workmanship that made Sheffield famous across the world. The city is sometimes called “The Steel City” – and with good reason. Several major innovations in steelmaking and metallurgy have their roots in Sheffield. The blades on the badge tell that story: Benjamin Huntsman was one of Sheffield’s most important innovators. Around 1740, unhappy with the poor steel used for clock springs, he created the crucible steel method. By melting steel in clay pots over coke fires, he produced a much stronger, purer, and more reliable type of steel than ever before. Though the process was secret and Huntsman initially exported much of his output (French cutlers used his steel before many local Sheffield manufacturers adopted it), the method eventually became widespread. Around the same time, a local cutler, Thomas Boulsover, discovered a way to fuse a thin sheet of silver onto copper. This created Old Sheffield Plate – a cheaper but good-looking alternative to solid silver. It made decorative items more affordable and helped Sheffield’s reputation grow. While Huntsman’s crucible steel was high quality, and Sheffield Plate was perfect for decorative items, the Industrial Revolution increased the demand for sheer quantity. Enter Henry Bessemer and the Bessemer converter – a method of blowing air through molten iron to remove impurities. This made steel faster and cheaper to produce in large quantities. Sheffield, with its abundant coal, iron, water power and skilled workforce, became the global capital of heavy engineering. Perhaps the best-known Sheffield contribution of the 20th century is stainless steel, discovered by Harry Brearley in 1913 while researching steels for gun barrels that resisted erosion. Initially thought useful only for high-temperature environments such as large WWI guns, Brearley quickly realised its commercial value. He began using it for the mass production of food-related items such as cutlery and saucepans. Until then, carbon-steel knives were prone to unhygienic rusting if they were not frequently polished, while sterling silver or electroplated nickel silver cutlery was generally the only alternative – far too expensive for most households. Soon, families across England and beyond were enjoying affordable, rust-free cutlery and more hygienic kitchen equipment. One of those remarkable innovations that rarely gets a mention in grand histories – but which boosted the quality of life for millions. Today, while the economy has moved away from steel, it still retains a foothold. Firms such as Forgemasters, owned by the Ministry of Defence since 2021 due to its strategic value, remain active in the city. They produce some of the largest and most complex steel castings in the UK, supplying critical components for defence (including nuclear submarines) and pushing the boundaries of what specialist steelworks can do. So that explains the Blades. But the other feature of the badge takes us back a few centuries before the city became a mass of chimneys and steelworks – to a time of knights and chivalry. The other element is the White Rose of York. The Wars of the Roses (1455–1487) were civil wars between the houses of Lancaster and York. Yorkshire’s emblem, the White Rose of York, has been a symbol for centuries. The house of York looked set to become the ruling royal family until the Battle of Bosworth, when Henry Tudor seized the crown from Richard III. The Yorkist legacy lived on, however, in the Tudor Rose, as Henry married Elizabeth of York and united the two houses in his bloodline. Whether in forging steel, crafting cutlery, or battling on the football pitch – that never-say-die Yorkist attitude lives on in the club. Sheffield United’s home, Bramall Lane, with a capacity of about 32,700, is one of the oldest major football grounds in the world. The stadium, the town, the club—all stand on layers of history. To support Sheffield United is to support a legacy of steel, of invention, of working people striving to make something better. Bramall Lane is where football meets steel; where the clang of history echoes in every goal, every challenge, every derby. The Blades’ blade, sharpened by industry, cuts through time.
- Scunthorpe United FC
Scunthorpe, The Iron. They have recently won promotion to the National League and have got off to a solid start worthy of their nickname – undefeated in their first six games. So let’s do this ambitious team with an iconic name and badge the honour – and #GetTheBadgeIn. Because if ever there was an example of a football club embodying local identity - and then that indentity coning under risk - Scunthorpe is it. Let's rewind to begin with: Scunthorpe United Football Club were formed in 1899. Shortly afterwards, in 1910, they merged with a neighbouring side, North Lindsey United, becoming Scunthorpe & Lindsey United. They joined the Midland League in 1912, turned professional, and built up through league successes. Over the decades, Scunthorpe United enjoyed periods of greater success. They won the Midland League several times, notably in 1926–27 and 1938–39, before finally being elected into the Football League in 1950. They rose through the divisions, reaching the Second Division (now the Championship) for stretches, and had memorable promotions under managers such as Nigel Adkins, including gaining promotion to the Championship via a play-off final. However, recent times have not been kind to the club. After long spells in the Football League, they dropped out in 2022, ending a run of 72 years among the league’s members. Since then they have also experienced further relegations, financial difficulties, ownership changes, and even the threat of collapse — only to be saved by local people and new owners who stepped in. So what then of their badge? A worker’s fist grasping an iron girder. It points directly to the industrial roots and identity of Scunthorpe as a steel and iron-making town. Their nickname, The Iron, echoes this industrial heritage. To understand the club’s identity, you must understand Scunthorpe itself. The town was transformed from a largely agricultural area to a major centre of iron and steel production in the mid-19th century, once large deposits of middle Lias ironstone were discovered east of Scunthorpe. The ironstone, while plentiful, was not of the highest grade — relatively low in iron content and high in lime — so processing it required importing coal or coke and dealing with large amounts of slag. Railways played a critical role. The construction of the Trent, Ancholme and Grimsby Railway in the 1860s connected Scunthorpe’s ironstone fields to coal sources (especially from South Yorkshire) and to shipping routes. This transport infrastructure turbocharged the iron industry in the area. Several major works were built: Appleby-Frodingham, Redbourn Iron Works, and Normanby Park (Lysaghts), among them. These consolidated over time, forming larger companies. In 1967, under the Labour government, many steel and iron operations across the UK were nationalised via the British Steel Corporation. In Scunthorpe, the various works — Appleby-Frodingham, Redbourn, Normanby Park and others — were brought under this national ownership. Later privatisation, mergers (Corus, then Tata Steel), and recent ownership changes have shaped the modern era. Scunthorpe Steelworks remain one of the UK’s last major primary steel producing sites — that is, making steel from iron ore, not only recycled scrap. There have been recent concerns about the future: high costs, environmental pressures, the need to modernise (for example shifting from blast furnaces to electric arc furnaces), and repeated talk of closure. Around 2,700 jobs are directly employed by Scunthorpe Steelworks today, jobs that remain the backbone of the town. This summer, the industry was given a lifeline. Prime Minister Keir Starmer summoned MPs to an emergency session of Parliament, where the new Labour government passed a bill to prevent Scunthorpe Steelworks from shutting down. The move, widely linked to possible renationalisation, has been hailed as a turning point not just for the plant but for the community that depends on it. For Scunthorpe, steel is not just an industry — it is an identity. Scunthorpe have a good record with their kits recently too - an away one from two seasons ago had the steelworks silhouette embedded in it and their current home kit includes blue iron chainlinks in place of the traditional pinstripes as yet another nod to the heritage. The town's other great export are Golden Wonder crisps. Hopefully the town, and the team, can retain its Iron making heritage... nobody wants to play "The Golden Wonders" in the future. Just like their football club, Scunthorpe’s people continue to fight, endure, and believe. And they're on the way back up...















