1994–96 Manchester United Home Shirt – Authentication Guide
⸻
Shirt Overview
Team: Manchester United
Seasons: 1994–96
Type: Home
Manufacturer: Umbro
Primary Colour: Red with black and white collar
Notable Match: Manchester United 1–0 Liverpool (1996 FA Cup Final)
⸻
Key Authentication Features
Crest: Embroidered Manchester United badge with gold thread and white shield border, stitched onto the chest.
Umbro Logo: White embroidered Umbro logo opposite the crest.
Sponsor: “SHARP” printed in white — clean, slightly glossy finish.
Pattern: Features a shadow print of Old Trafford’s East Stand, floodlights, and “Theatre of Dreams” inscription across the chest.
Collar: Thick black collar with white and red pinstriping, button-up fastening with Umbro text inside the neckline.
Inner Labels: Blue Umbro tag stitched into collar; some also include a secondary printed size/country tag (“Made in England”).
Material: Shiny polyester with a ribbed texture, lightweight for its era.
⸻
Player Info
1994–96 Manchester United First-Team Squad
Player | Position |
---|---|
Peter Schmeichel | Goalkeeper |
Gary Walsh | Goalkeeper |
Kevin Pilkington | Goalkeeper |
Gary Neville | Defender |
Denis Irwin | Defender |
Steve Bruce | Defender |
Gary Pallister | Defender |
David May | Defender |
Lee Martin | Defender |
Pat McGibbon | Defender |
Roy Keane | Midfielder |
Paul Ince | Midfielder |
Nicky Butt | Midfielder |
Brian McClair | Midfielder |
Paul Scholes | Midfielder |
Ryan Giggs | Midfielder |
Andrei Kanchelskis | Midfielder |
David Beckham | Midfielder |
Eric Cantona | Forward |
Andy Cole | Forward |
Mark Hughes | Forward |
Lee Sharpe | Forward |
Keith Gillespie | Forward |
Simon Davies | Forward |
Manager: Sir Alex Ferguson | |
⸻ | |
Season Summary | |
Manchester United wore this iconic shirt during their 1995–96 double-winning season, claiming the Premier League and FA Cup. It featured in memorable matches including Cantona’s famous volley against Liverpool at Wembley. The shirt spanned two seasons and saw the emergence of the Class of ’92. |
⸻
Final Notes
Common fake giveaways include a dull sponsor print, low-quality shadow graphics, or missing size tags. Authentic shirts have a fine pattern texture and bold stadium imagery across the front.
This post is part of Shirtchecker.com’s mission to help collectors visually authenticate shirts and avoid buying fakes.