Sports22:30 · 19h ago

Pink boots dominate the 2026 World Cup as football’s old color rules fade

YnetCenter
Translated & summarized from Ynet by baba
The story · English

The 2026 World Cup has been awash in pink, from a Croatian goalkeeper in a bright pink kit to pink-shirted referees and countless players wearing pink boots. The article says the color has become so visually dominant that once noticed, it is hard to see anything else, and that is exactly what shoe manufacturers want. Nike global footwear chief Audinga Nimako told the New York Times that demand for bright, bold colors is driving the trend, because athletes and consumers believe vivid colors boost confidence. He said Nike testing showed pink stands out especially well against green grass, both in the stadium and on television.

Most players in the tournament are contractually required to wear the pink boots supplied to them, though there are exceptions. Lionel Messi wears Adidas El Ultimo Tango boots in white, light blue and glittering gold, Christian Pulisic has white Puma boots with blue stars, and Nike made Cristiano Ronaldo special gold boots. Referees, meanwhile, must keep to traditional black Adidas shoes because of FIFA’s sponsorship arrangement.

The article traces pink’s rise in football and fashion over several years, saying the trend peaked now after Messi’s all-pink Inter Miami image became a kind of final seal. It notes that pink was not always coded as feminine, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries it was considered a boys’ color, while blue was associated with girls. A 1918 issue of Ladies’ Home Journal even stated, “The generally accepted rule is pink for boys and blue for girls.”

After World War II, American manufacturers and marketers pushed pink as a color for women and girls, with campaigns like “Think Pink” aimed at sending women back to domestic roles. In the 1980s, ultrasound technology helped companies create separate product lines for boys and girls, reinforcing the social split. But according to Westminster University professor Andrew Groves, football culture has now moved past some of those masculinity stereotypes, and pink helps modern players stand out as both athletes and brands.

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