Arsenal
Early Looks at 2026-27 Premier League Kits: The Leaks and Key Details
Leaked 2026-27 kit details for Arsenal, Aston Villa, Chelsea, Leeds, Liverpool, Man City and Man Utd
With the 2025/26 season only halfway complete, early leaks are sketching out how several Premier League kits might appear in 2026-27. Below is a focused rundown of the reported designs circulating online.
Arsenal’s home shirt is described as largely classic but with subtle detail: a burgundy collar that features a zig-zag pattern and multiple shades of red across the body. The away design has been likened to a “reverse” of the club’s famous ‘Bruised Banana’ shirts from the early 90s, pairing a navy base with the retro pattern and red and yellow accents. Lightning bolt graphics are said to return on the third kit, drawing comparisons to the club’s 2019-20 and 2021-22 away shirts.
Aston Villa’s leaks suggest a shift from the recent template. The reported home kit uses a sky blue collar on a polo-style design. Discussion persists over away and third colourways, with blue, white, black and yellow all mentioned. Some versions indicate a tribute to the gates of Villa Park on the third shirt.
Chelsea details are still speculative. Early reports point to sharp yellow accents, labelled “Midwest Gold”, cutting through royal blue on the home jersey. That same “Midwest Gold” tone is also mentioned for an away shirt that would sit against a predominantly black base. For the third kit, a vintage badge is said to reappear in homage to the white, red and blue strips of the early 90s, though modern designs are expected to differ.
Leeds United are reportedly set to introduce horizontal stripes on their home shirt for the first time, with clear inspiration drawn from a 2005-06 Admiral shirt that once featured vertical blue and yellow pinstripes.
Liverpool’s home leak takes cues from the Candy-sponsored shirt worn between 1989 and 1991 but in a much darker tone than their 2025-26 home. The away kit is said to use white, grey and red with a retro Adidas logo, while the third is expected to be mainly black with silver and red accents.
Manchester City’s home design appears largely traditional, with fading from sky blue to white at the base. The club confirmed fan involvement in the third-kit process: “Your imagination is your tool 🫵🎨 It’s now your turn to design our @pumafootball 26/27 Third Kit with PUMA AI CREATOR 👕”. The club said 180,000 designs were submitted and the top 10, decided by fans and experts, were unveiled last year.
Manchester United’s leaked home shirt, seen on Bruno Fernandes, shows a clean collar and white accents. The away top is reported to be bright royal blue, while mock-ups of the third project an off-white tone with a central badge and a subtle Lancashire rose in the background.
Arsenal
Henry Urges Caution After Max Dowman’s Record Goal
Thierry Henry: protect Max Dowman after record goal. Rooney’s rise and Vaughan’s decline warning. NB
Thierry Henry has urged restraint from supporters after Max Dowman’s record goal, saying the teenager must be handled carefully if his potential is to be realised. Henry made his comments on Sky Sports Monday Night Football following the moment that prompted widespread reaction.
“I had goosebumps, I’ll be honest with you,” Henry said. “I don’t often get goosebumps watching a game, but I had goosebumps because I remember my first goal, my first moment. Even if you are not an Arsenal fan, at the particular moment I think everyone could relate and was happy for him and put the Arsenal thing on the side.”
The programme also revisited the context of the Premier League youngest goalscorer mark. Wayne Rooney was a previous holder of the Premier League’s youngest goalscorer crown, having scored a stunner against Arsenal in 2002. This week, the retired legend revealed that his weekly salary at the time was just $100 because he was too young to even sign a professional contract. Rooney later went on to become one of the greatest players in English soccer history, winning numerous trophies, captaining Manchester United, the England national and breaking decades-old goalscoring records for both.
Henry used those contrasting career trajectories to make a plea for perspective. He pointed to examples of players who fulfilled early promise and those whose careers were curtailed by circumstance. One such case was Vaughan, who came from the same Everton academy as others mentioned on the show; Vaughan made only 52 Premier League appearances in a career limited by injuries and finished in League Two in 2021. The best season of his career was a 24-goal campaign for Bury in League One in 2016–17.
If Dowman is to follow in Rooney’s footsteps and realise the superstar potential that has been apparent for years now, Henry challenged fans to be patient and protect the teenager at this early stage of his career.
Arsenal
Money Talks: CIES Ranks the World’s Most Valuable Squads
CIES values nine squads over $1bn; Real Madrid leads at $1.78bn while Tottenham exceed $1bn. Values.
The surge in transfer prices and squad valuations has reshaped how clubs are measured. The CIES Football Observatory produces those estimates by weighing a player’s quality, age, position and length of contract, and those individual valuations are then summed to give each squad a market value.
The scale is striking. There are nine clubs with squads valued above $1 billion. At the top is Real Madrid with a squad valuation of $1.78 billion and Kylian Mbappé listed as the most valuable player at $221 million. Barcelona follow with $1.60 billion, Lamine Yamal accounting for $403.9 million of that total. Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain each sit at $1.55 billion, with Bukayo Saka ($131.5 million) and Désiré Doué ($150.3 million) named as their most valuable players respectively.
Liverpool’s roster is valued at $1.20 billion, most valuable player Florian Wirtz ($149.8 million). Bayern Munich come in at $1.15 billion with Michael Olise ($162.6 million) as their top-rated asset. Tottenham’s squad is valued at $1.03 billion; Xavi Simons is listed as their most valuable player ($98.1 million), despite the club’s current relegation fight and Igor Tudor’s assessment that players “are lacking when we attack, we lack the quality to score the goal. We are lacking in the middle to run and we are lacking behind to stay there to suffer and not concede the goal.”
The list also includes Manchester United ($953 million, Benjamin Šeško $100.3 million) and Inter ($942 million, Lautaro Martínez $117 million). Earlier-positioned squads under $1 billion include Atlético Madrid ($903 million, Julián Álvarez $136.5 million), Juventus ($896 million, Kenan Yıldız $152.5 million) and Brighton ($894 million, Diego Gómez $86.4 million).
Several voices in the game have reflected on the market changes. Karl-Heinz Rumminegge said, “There are some players who do not come with a price tag.” Robert Lewandowski complained, “You are young, you score 10 goals in six months and some club will pay 60 or 70 million,” adding, “Before, you had to achieve something.” Vincent Kompany warned players about hype: “I always tell my players, ‘When there’s hype please don’t believe it, you’re not that good.’”
Whether the valuations mirror on-field quality or the inflation of a transfer market remains the central question CIES data brings into focus.
Arsenal
KMI: Brighton Were Wrongly Denied Penalty in 1–0 Loss to Arsenal
KMI rules Brighton were wrongly denied a penalty in Arsenal loss, marking a third post-match review.
The Premier League Key Match Incidents panel has concluded that Brighton & Hove Albion were wrongly denied a penalty in their 1–0 defeat to Arsenal earlier this month. The panel found that on-field referee Chris Kavanagh should have awarded a spot-kick and that VAR Michael Salisbury was wrong not to intervene.
During the match Kavanagh did not call for a foul and VAR Michael Salisbury cleared the incident, with the Match Centre then taking to social media to confirm “no clear and obvious error” was detected. The KMI panel, which is made up of three former players or coaches and one representative from both the Premier League and Professional Game Match Officials Limited, has now overruled that assessment.
Arsenal’s victory over Brighton took them seven points clear at the top of the standings after Manchester City were held by Nottingham Forest. It is impossible to predict how the award of a penalty for Brighton might have impacted both that specific game and the wider title race. If converted, it would have changed the trajectory of the game, but Arsenal could still have gone on to win.
This is the third time this season that the KMI panel has issued a ruling that has gone against a decision which benefited Arsenal. Earlier this month the panel decided Declan Rice should have conceded a penalty for handball in a 2–1 victory over Chelsea, noting he wrapped his hands around Jorrel Hato and deflected the ball away with his arm. The Blues did score moments later in an unrelated play.
In December the panel ruled that William Saliba was wrongly saved from conceding a penalty against Everton striker Thierno Barry in a game that ended 1–0 in Arsenal’s favor. Salisbury was the VAR for that game as well.
The repeated post-match findings raise questions about the application of video review in key moments and the consistency of on-field and VAR decisions, as highlighted by the panel’s latest statement.
