User:Arntor/sandbox

hei 99
In 1906, the club's first official team wore kits with a variety of colors and patterns, which included white shirts with red collars or vertical blue stripes, and even red shirts.[131] This indefinition in the equipment was only solved in 1909, when through the initiative of Monteiro da Costa, Porto stipulated in its first statutes that the players had to use "a shirt with blue vertical stripes, black shorts, and personal footwear" as the club's uniform, at every training and match.[132] Some argued that the kit should have included the city colours, green and white.[131] Monteiro da Costa, however, defended the blue-and-white combination because he believed the colors "should be those of the country's flag, and not of the city's flag", hoping that the club would "not only defend the good name of the city, but also that of Portugal, in sporting feuds against foreigners."[14]

In 1975, Adidas became the first sports apparel manufacturers to provide kits for the club.[124] Eight years later, Porto became the first Portuguese team to have a shirt sponsor, afte

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The 2024 season is FK Bodø/Glimt's 108th season in existence and the club's seventh consecutive season in the top flight of Norwegian football. The club will be playing their first official match this season against the Dutch club Ajax, in the 2023–24 Europa Conference League.

Players
For season transfers, see transfers winter 2022–23 and transfers summer 2023.

Kit evolution
gul(?) hex fcf635 kongeblå / mørkeblå hex 070cad

lyseblå 73e3f0

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While other towns in Nordland county like Narvik, Mo i Rana and Mosjøen had started their football clubs earlier, the larger town of Bodø was without a major football club until the latter part of 1916. The new club was founded as Ski- og Fotballklubben Bodø/Glimt. One of the founders was Erling Tjærandsen, who also became the club's first president and later an honorary club member. Tjærandsen was also a known footballer and skier. Glimt's first match was against Bodø Highschool, because Glimt was the only football club in town. In 1919 Glimt won their first title: County Champions of Nordland. In the 1920s, Glimt suffered from bad morale and poor finances. At one point, there were talks about merging Glimt into the Ski Club B. and O.I, but following discussions, the intentions were not carried through. The club received an infusion of new encouragement through visiting footballing stars and coaches from southern Norway such as Jørgen Juve in 1929. In the 1930s, Glimt also began training indoors to reduce the impact of the severe arctic winters.

This new approach in the late 1920s and early 1930s yielded some positive results and Glimt have since been a top club in Northern Norway, winning nine North-Norwegian championships, and nationally in Norway since the 1970s.