Better late than never, right?
Last summer's postponement of Euro 2020 didn't just deprive us of a summer of major international football, it also put a halt to something that we take very seriously in these parts.
Yes, the ranking of football shirts.
But fear not, we're back for a Euro 2020(1) edition that takes in all 48 home and away shirts that will be on show around Europe this summer, from Wembley to Baka and Glasgow to Seville, and ranging from the good, the bad and, in the case of the pretty strange Puma away kits, the puzzlingly similar.
So sit back, relax, pour yourself a nice, crisp European lager and get ready to no doubt get incredibly angry at a list of football shirts ranked by how aesthetically pleasing they look to one man, and one man alone.
Let's go.
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48. Belgium home
Coming to you fresh from the lay-by on the M62 is this effort from Belgium, who seem to have taken what was a pretty decent kit with all the things you'd expect - it's red, it's got a black and yellow trim - and then driven a tractor over it.
The result is something that a farmer probably wouldn't even line the chicken coup with.
47. Finland away
Anyone who has ever set foot on a golf driving range will have seen something like the Finland away kit, with its fresh 'would you like an hour, 90 minutes or two hours?' vibes coming straight at you from behind the counter.
There's also something of the determined underdog finishing in the top 20 of the PGA Championship about it too, which isn't a good thing.
46. Switzerland away
Right so prepare yourselves, because you're about to experience deja vu.
Kit manufacturers rolling out the same designs for different countries in major tournaments is nothing new of course, but Puma have absolutely taken it up several notches for Euro 2020.
We'll start with this incredibly bland effort for neutral's favourites Switzerland, and... yeah you've forgotten about it already haven't you?
45. Czech Republic away
And if you had forgotten all about it, here it is again.
Puma's effort for the Czech Republic at least sees the addition of an extra colour in the blue detailing, but, well, that's it really.
As with all of these Puma kits, the addition of the name of the country on the front does give it a certain Olympics training gear feel, which isn't really what we've ever been looking for in these sort of lists, quite frankly. They clearly didn't get our email.
44. Austria away
The only thing saving it from looking like the sort of thing you'd go running in is the little Austria badges that are dotted around the shirt, but then it is perhaps because of them that we're missing any sort of standout detail below the admittedly pretty intimidating 'OSTERREICH' plastered on the front.
It's black, so that at least makes it stand out from the other Puma away kits. But that's it really.
43. Italy away
By above standards this has at least got a fair bit going on, and there's something to be said for the green and red of the Italian flag being incorporated into it, but it is probably a kit that is just a little bit too tainted by association.
It is also probably a bit more suited to the green grass of Wimbledon instead of Wembley.
42. North Macedonia away
We're out of Puma's clutches now and diving straight into Pro Evolution Soccer 2009 with this effort from major international tournament debutants North Macedonia.
The country has only existed with its present name since February 2019 - having previously been Macedonia - and so there was a real chance to make a splash on the global scene with a different, stylish away shirt this summer.
The chance was missed.
41. Portugal away
Euro 2016 might seem like it was several lifetimes ago but actually it was just five years, as the clue is in the name.
Portugal were victorious in that competition sporting a stylish mint green away kit that dazzled under the French floodlights and served as pretty solid change colours, but this time around their home kit seems to have mated with that away one to produce this.
They may have earned their stripes five years ago but they didn't need to wear them.
40. France away
It's a white shirt with a blue tick and a blue cockerel, but enough about the new Tottenham kit.
France's change strip does at least include some stripes down the side in the classic red, white and blue of one of the tournament favourites, but if the world champions do follow up their 2018 World Cup success by triumphing this summer then don't expect their away kit to live long in the memory.
39. Czech Republic home
If it looks like a bog standard kit then that is largely because it is, but then you look that little bit closer and BANG! It's only a lion!
Of course it is well-known that lions roam freely throughout the likes of your Pragues, your Olomouces, and your Ostravas, and so it makes perfect sense for a giant one to feature on the front of the Czech Republic home shirt.
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38. Denmark away
Red for the home, white the away, the opposite colour for the detailing, those soothing Hummel chevrons down the sleeves. You always know what you're getting with Denmark kits at major tournaments.
But what in the name of Carlsberg Export is this? Blue?!
They might not have wanted us to notice those lines coming down from the neckline but notice we did. And we didn't much care for them.
37. Switzerland home
Remember the tractor that drove over the Belgium kit earlier? Well it still had a bit left in the tank.
It's nowhere near as bad as the Belgium one obviously, as very few things in life are, but the confusing lines across the kit don't really add much except regret, and that's never a good thing.
Still better than the away one though.
36. England home
The badge in the middle is always a bold choice, and sometimes it can pay off really rather handsomely.
Plenty will argue that this is in fact one of those times, but it just ends up looking a bit like a crude imitation of England's France 98 kit that has been rendered on a dodgy 3D printer.
Honestly. Stick David Batty in it and you'd see.
35. Slovakia home
And it is with this that we would like formally welcome you to what we in the kit ranking business call 'the mid-table'.
Slovakia's home kit is very much a Slovakia home kit, and has remained a Slovakia home kit ever since they started making Slovakia home kits.
Like a lockdown haircut there's something a bit funky going on down the sides there, but that is very much that.
34. Hungary away
Again like Slovakia you're hardly going to be shocked with what you're getting here, but adidas still deserve some plaudits for keeping their designs fairly specific for specific countries, something that we've seen others haven't.
Hungary have got the colours of their flag across all of this away kit, and it makes for a decent attempt at the very least, even if it could probably have been better.
33. Spain home
Again, it is just fine.
Spain have a long history of succeeding in kits that look just like this, give or take the little details like the little pattern on the front there, and you really wouldn't be surprised to find out that this was actually what they wore back then they won Euro 2012.
If it ain't broke...
32. England away
What happened to the spirit of '66 and all that?
If you hadn't heard, Bobby Moore and the boys won the World Cup back then wearing a sleek, now classic red shirt that England have ripped off for years now, and correctly so.
The change colours will be this blue number this time around though, and there's something about it coupled with the red detailing that makes you strain your eyes a bit.
31. Hungary home
Again you'll have seen shirts like this before, but Adidas continue to score points for the little details such as the colours on the v-neck collar that comes down and the stripes on the sides.
We might have been a bit down on horizontal patterns across shirts earlier on but these ones are okay, and they add up to a decent effort.
30. Croatia away
It is an age-old question that confronts a Croatian every two years. Just how big do you make your checks?
The contrast between their home and away kits could scarcely be any bigger for Euro 2020, as we'll come to discover later, and the checks here are probably just a little bit too small if we're all going to be honest with ourselves for a second.
There, felt good to get it out didn't it?
29. Ukraine away
When you've got a yellow home kit then your away number can take on a certain unseen quality, in that it can quite literally not be seen for large periods of time.
Seriously, there are Norwich away kits from the dim and distant past that go for thousands to the people who like that sort of thing. Collectors, mostly.
Anyway, this is Ukraine's blue away kit.
You may not see it again.
28. Scotland home
The sleeves are good, the stripes are good, and the little wavy horizontal lines are... well they're there.
That's right, Scotland are back in a major tournament, and they're back with an adidas shirt that screams "can you just make it a little bit more jazzy on the front please?" as it passed through the final inspection.
It'll do though, and plenty of them will be whipped off if they can get a result against England at Wembley.
27. North Macedonia home
The cultural reach of the little baby that seemed to somehow live inside the sun on the Teletubbies might well be underestimated, as at least now we know it reached North Macedonia.
The underdogs have followed up their quite exceedingly bland away kit (all the way above at No.42) with this tribute to that very baby and that very sun, and you know what it isn't terrible.