Same old story: Palermo got their colours after a
laundry incident turned their football shirts pink. The club had previously
worn a combination of red and blue, so it's doubtful that such a mutation is
even possible. In any case, the more widely accepted explanation is based upon
a letter sent to the club's president, Joshua 'Giuseppe' Whitaker, in 1905
suggesting the change to pink and black to represent the rosolio and amaro
produced by Whitaker's family business, which was drunk after a game in
accordance with the result: rosolio – which is pink, sweet – after a win, and
amaro – black, bitter – in defeat. (It is not known what was consumed in the
event of a draw.)
The new colours weren't in fact implemented until
1907, the same year the club changed its name to Palermo Foot-Ball Club.
Hitherto, they'd identified as the Anglo-Palermitan Athletic and Foot-Ball
Club, reflecting the team's English ties: the aforementioned ornithologist
Joseph Whitaker, Viceconsul Edward De Garston, Norman Olsen, George Blake, who
had previously been involved in the establishment of Genoa Cricket and Football
Club, as well as Ignazio Pagano, a local Italian who had been introduced to
football during his two years spent studying in England.
The opportunity to actually play football was scarce
and centred around matches against the crews of passing British ships. Indeed,
the only other team in Sicily at the time was Messina FC, founded in 1900 by
Alfredo Marangolo, who had studied alongside Ignazio Pagano in London. In 1901,
the two of them would get together and organise a match between their respective
teams, and again in 1904, before the arrangement was solidified with the
creation of the Whitaker Challenge Cup in 1905. This annual fixture ran for
four consecutive years (honours even) before the 1908 Messina earthquake put a terrible
stop to it.
In its place, and quite independent from it, came the
Lipton Challenge Cup. One of the crews Palermo had played against had been that
of the Erin, a privately owned yacht belonging Sir Thomas Lipton. Palermo had won,
and the tea-magnate rewarded them with a formidable trophy. Unable to commit to
a rematch, Lipton stipulated that teams from Sicily and Campania should compete
annually for the cup, which effectively meant Palermo playing against either
Naples Foot-Ball Club or Unione Sportiva Internazionale Napoli. This
competition ran until 1915, cut short by Italy's entrance into the First World
War.
In the wake of the conflict, a number of smaller clubs
emerged: Trinacria, Itala, Esperia, and Racing FBC. Valentino Columbo, who'd
played for Palermo prior to the war, purchased Racing FBC, who played in blue
and white halved shirt, and rebranded them Unione Sportiva Palermo. Within a
year, he changed the colours to pink and black, facilitating a sense of
continuity between the new club and the older one. More mergers were to follow
– with Unione Sportiva Leoni in 1922, Sport Club Libertas Palermo in 1923, and
'Vigor' in 1927 – and another name change, to Palermo Football Club.
Meanwhile, the team muddled along in Lega Sud, struggling financially.
By the time of Serie A's inauguration in 1929, Palermo
were playing in Group D – the 'Southern Directory Circle' – and came top of it,
gaining promotion into Serie B. Coincidently, that same year the club commissioned
a new badge, which is worthy of note because it was designed by the Italian
painter and futurist Giuseppe 'Pippo' Rizzo. Comprised of a horizontally
inclined rhombus set against a stylised, brown leather football, it was
replaced as early as 1932 after Palermo won promotion into Serie A. This was
the moment at which the club adopted the symbol of the golden eagle, derived
from the city’s coat of arms, which remains in place to this day.
Like so many other Italian football teams, Palermo would soon fall foul of Fascist initiatives. First they were obliged to ‘Italianise’ their name, and not long after were pressured into taking on the colours of municipal Palermo – red and yellow. In the midst of all this, they were relegated. If that wasn’t bad enough, in 1940 the FIGC kicked them out of the league due to insolvency.
Like so many other Italian football teams, Palermo would soon fall foul of Fascist initiatives. First they were obliged to ‘Italianise’ their name, and not long after were pressured into taking on the colours of municipal Palermo – red and yellow. In the midst of all this, they were relegated. If that wasn’t bad enough, in 1940 the FIGC kicked them out of the league due to insolvency.
Not for the first time, Palermo were forced into
affiliation with a lesser but more economically stable local rival. The team in
question was Juventina Palermo, who just so happened to wear the same colours that
Racing FBC had. The partnership was retitled Unione Sportiva Palermo-Juventina
and within a couple of years were playing in pink and black; within four, they
were called more simply Unione Sportiva Palermo.
The 1950s and 1960s would represent a period of
relative stability for Palermo. Flitting between series A and B, the most
dramatic thing that happened to them was another change of name, to Società
Sportiva Calcio Palermo, a by-product of the club listing itself as a
joint-stock company. At some point during this period – probably the late 1960s
– Palermo started experimenting with stripes. By the 1970s, this trend seemed
to have passed, a decade that was spent almost entirely within the confines of
Serie B.
The idea that the football shirt, and sportswear in general, is something other than utilitarian came about in the 1970s. If you wanted to identify a 'year zero' then 1972 might do, when Adidas launched their trefoil logo in the run up to the Munich Olympics. Up until then, branding in football had been low key, often non-existent. By the end of the decade it would be ubiquitous, thanks to the efforts of firms such as Admiral, Umbro, Puma and, of course, Adidas. In Italy, the company that led the charge was Pouchain.
This golden age of footballing couture would last
until the end of the century, whereafter sports kit started to become more
technical – or would pretend to be. Even though the notion of the football
shirt as high performing sportwear is slightly disingenuous, it is fair to say
that the invention of manmade fabrics has been of some benefit to the game, has
it has for many other sports. When Pouchain were active, acrylic was the
material of choice, which had itself superseded wool and cotton. Ennerre favoured acrylic, before eventually getting on
board with polyester in the early 1990s, while ABM liked to mix polyester with cotton.
Palermo have had gear manufactured by all three:
Pouchain from 1979-80, Ennerre from 1980-86, and ABM from 1990-96. Designed by
Pierro Gratton, Pouchain’s shirt had by far the best badge: the silhouetted
profile of an eagle's head framed within the outline of a diamond. The problem with it
was that the fashion of the day dictated that the jerseys were tightly fitted.
The Ennerre shirts were more forgiving but suffered from the fact that they
didn’t incorporate the club’s insignia, which wasn’t so unusual back then (see
also Como, Avellino, even Juventus). After two years with Ennerre’s offshoot company
Ennedue, who were equally negligent, Hummel stepped into the fold. Again, the
Danish firm didn’t see fit to incorporate a badge, but otherwise showed
promise. Finally, ABM took over, and knocked the ball out of the park.
Palermo’s 1990/91 shirt might be their best. For one,
it had a badge, although not Gratton’s, which the club had got rid of in 1987. Instead,
a Iberian style shield, of the type Inter used throughout the 1980s, with an
oblique pink and black stripe running through the middle and the basic outline
of an eagle’s head over the top. The template itself was the same that was
being used at Fiorentina, Piacenza, Messina and Ternana: collar, trimmed
V-neck, ABM's logo running in vertical micropatterned lines within the fabric
of the shirt. The sponsor was ‘Citta di Palermo’ in what I can only assume was
some sort of tourism initiative, which let it down a bit.
For the next season, the minimal club crest was
dropped for a more complicated rendering of an eagle almost in flight. The
collar was now black, while the new sponsor – consumer electronics producer Sèleco
– was printed in blue. ABM also produced a pink and black striped third
version with diagonal micropatterning, which hardly seemed necessary but looked good all the same.
1991-92
The 1990s saw Palermo – or Unione Sportiva Città di Palermo, as they were known from 1994 onward – yo-yoing between series B and C. The new century brought with it a revival of fortune, with the club qualifying for the UEFA Cup/Europa League on three separate occasions. The bubble finally burst in 2019, whereupon Palermo were forced to reregister as Palermo Società Sportiva Dilettantistica and ply their trade in Serie D. Upon promotion into Serie C in 2020, they were permitted to restitute the name Palermo Football Club, and are currently playing in Serie B wearing gear supplied by Puma.