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Why Do Football Goalies Wear a Different Colour Uniform?

YOKOHAMA, JAPAN - JULY 30: Alyssa Naeher #1 of Team United States saves the fourth penalty from Aniek Nouwen #4 of Team Netherlands during the Women's Quarter Final match between Netherlands and United States on day seven of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at International Stadium Yokohama on July 30, 2021 in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan. (Photo by Francois Nel/Getty Images): why do football goalies wear a different colour?

When you watch a football game, the easiest players to pick out are almost always the goalkeepers, aka goalies. Not only do they stay mostly in one place throughout a match, but they're always wearing shirts of a totally different colour than the players in other positions. Sometimes, their shirts aren't even a colour that's in their team's palette at all! For example, at the upcoming 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, you might see the Lioness goalies wearing bright green or orange, while the rest of the team is in white and blue.

It's not just a style choice — it's actually a core rule of football. Here's why football goalies wear a different colour, plus a few other things you might not know about goalkeepers.

Why Do Goalies Wear a Different Colour Uniform?

It's actually part of the official rules of the game. Goalies need to wear shirts that are a different colour to the rest of the players, according to the International Football Association Board. Specifically, the rules state, "Each goalkeeper must wear colours that are distinguishable from the other players and the match officials. If the two goalkeepers' shirts are the same colour and neither has another shirt, the referee allows the match to be played."

In other words, each goalie should be the only person on the pitch wearing their specific coloured shirt. It might be an "accent" colour from their team's existing uniform palette, or it could be a colour that the individual goalie prefers for whatever reason. There's no formal "reason" listed in the rules, but presumably, it's to ensure that the goalies, who have slightly different jobs (and rules) than other players, are easy for game officials to spot easily and officiate correctly, even in the chaos of the game. Intriguingly, there's even some research that suggests that wearing specific colours can have an impact on opposing players: a 2013 study found that players scored fewer penalty kicks against goalkeepers wearing red!

If both goalies accidentally wear the same colour, one or both of them is technically supposed to change. If they aren't able to, though, the referee can let them ago ahead with the game. After all, goalies typically stay in their respective goal areas on opposite sides of the pitch, so the likelihood of them getting mixed up with each other is pretty minimal.

The rules of the game also allow a few other special guidelines for what goalies can wear. Unlike other players, goalies are permitted to wear "tracksuit bottoms" in place of shorts. There's no reason for this given in the rules, but most goalies prefer trousers because it protects their skin from the impact of sliding and diving on scratchy grass or turf to make saves. They're also allowed to wear "goalkeepers' caps," which are essentially baseball caps that can provide protection from heat, sun, sweat, and glare while on the pitch. Other players can wear head coverings, but only in styles that are "non-protruding" (i.e. definitely not a brimmed cap).

What Other Rules Do Goalies Have?

Goalies get to do more than just wear different uniforms than the rest of the players. They also have a few special rules that apply only to them during the game. The biggest one is that they're the only players on the pitch who are allowed to use their hands. Goalies use their hands as a core part of their position, in fact, since their job is to stop the ball from entering the net. Any other player on the pitch, however, is forbidden from using their hands or arms. That's why you'll see moves like "heading" the ball, to move the ball along when kicking it isn't a good choice. Even goalies are subject to this rule sometimes: if they move outside their own penalty area (a large rectangular section at the end of the field marked by a white line), they stop being able to use their hands and arms.

Being a goalie is a very demanding role, and their differently coloured shirts put them in even more of a spotlight. Next time you tune into a football match, keep an eye out for their incredible athletics — they'll be easy to see!

Image Source: Getty / Francois Nel
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