#35 Finland (Home, 2010/2012)

 

I've been looking forward to get a Finland shirt for quite a long time, but never managed to buy one. When in Finland, they were way too expensive, and I was pretty confident I'd find a way to get a cheaper one online. Well, I was wrong, and it took me more than 3 years to finally have the chance to buy a Suomi shirt for a reasonable price, as thousands seem to have popped up on many different online shops! 

I felt really lucky, because not only I finally was able to order a Finland shirt, but also because this one is surely their nicest kit in ages. I honestly believe my louse photo does not show you properly how cool the shirt is, so here's a picture from Football Shirt Culture:


There's also a video of the official presentation, so here it goes too:

   

That's Stuart Baxer talking, but he's no longer in charge of the national team. Mixu Paatelainen replaced him, much for the despair of international journalists, because his name can be a little bit hard to write and spell. Finns seem to have really long names anyway.

I always liked Scandinavian football, but I always followed Sweden and Finland more closely. The local leagues are obviously not brilliant, specially in Finland, but it's great to see how unpredictable they are. In Sweden, since 2000, 9 different teams lifted the Allsvenskan trophy, and Finland had 5 different champions in the same period. Obviously HJK is a major force, and do they seem able to easily dominate the Veikkausliiga in the next few years. They have a really strong squad (for finnish standards), and they do have some promising youngsters coming in. Teemu Pukki, for example, recently joined Schalke 04 after impressive matches for the Helsinki side (actually two of those against Schalke), and is regarded as an eventual Raul replacement by the fans and Huub Stevens.

Tampere United, one of the teams who were making things a bit harder for HJK, were banned from the league last season, because of obscure connections to a Singapore-based company that was involved in a huge match-fixing scandal in the country. It was a shame, I really liked Tampere United.


I've been in Tampere a few years ago, and didn't manage to buy their shirt - you can find more about that story in my Estonia shirt post. 
Anyway, without Tampere on the league, I really stopped following finnish football so closely, but every now and then I still check Nordic Football, a really interesting blog about scandinavian football. I know Tampere Utd's fans started a new club, so I hope they reach the professional divisions as soon as possible.

The Finnish league faced serious hard moments when 9 RoPS players were arrested, accused of accepting bribes to affect match results. Wilson Perumal, a singaporean widely considered on of the most prolific criminal fixer of football matches, was also arrested in Rovaniemi (near Lapland, where Santa Claus "lives"), so Finland actually did something good for football. 

Now, a few things you probably know about Finland's soccer:

Jari Litmanen, a brilliant attacking midfielder/second striker. 


He played for Ajax, Barcelona and Liverpool, and was capped 137 times. Even though he was part of one of the strongest Finland's national teams ever, the country failed to have much impact in the international scene - they never qualified for a major tournament. Something that might change soon, when the Euros will be expanded to 24 teams. But don't expect them to have any chance of getting into the next World Cup, as they will have to play against Spain and France in their qualification group. 

Sami Hyypiä, a strong defender.


Also capped more than a hundred times for Finland (105), Hyypiä was quite successful with Liverpool. After 10 years in England, he moved to Bayer Leverkusen, where he became a caretaker manager a few months ago. It was recently confirmed that he'll be Leverkusen's permanent manager until 2015, so he's doing quite well. Possibly a future Finland coach.



One thing you probably don't know about Finland is that they trashed Portugal a few years ago: 1-4 in Estádio do Bessa. Portugal was getting ready for the 2002 World Cup, but the finnish weren't really afraid and completely humiliated the portuguese squad. It could have been worse. I was actually there (Bessa is Boavista's stadium), and it was a lot of fun to see the portuguese supporters cheering Finland in the final minutes, and booing (and insulting) the portuguese players. Our defenders were an absolute disgrace. Have a look here:


Finland also came to public notice in the US because of Conan O'Brien. He has a lot of fans up there, that kept sending him postcards. He then realized he looked a lot like their president Tarja Halonen (a woman). He spent a week in Finland and did a show about the trip, and it was probably one of the funniest things O'Brien did in his career. It's brilliant. You can find some of the best parts on Youtube. 


They also have a strange passion for Saunas, and things there are incredibly expensive. Helsinki is a very nice city though, and I specially liked Tampere.  

Some final thoughts on the shirt: the assymetric design is quite cool, and the white/blue combination looks specially good. It is obviously an Adidas template, but at least they did something a bit different with it. It is far better from the past boring plain-white-and-blue-stripes-on-the-sleeves Finland shirts.






If anyone does have a Tampere United shirt for sale (or knows how to get one), please get in touch. I'm looking for one for centuries now.

Francisco Ferreira

Journalist and football enthusiast. Born and raised in Porto, but ended up cheering the local minnows: Boavista FC. Football shirt collector, because it's a great to waste my money.

1 comment:

  1. Hi! I have a Tampere United shirt on sale, if interested you can contact me at info@finlandshirts.com
    Bye!

    ReplyDelete