This is not the first time this season that club history has been celebrated by football teams.
Italian club Juventus recently revealed their fourth kit during their 2-0 home defeat to Como, a joint collaboration with Adidas and Studio Sgura that is inspired by a 1996-97 season jersey.
Back in March, Liverpool released a retro jersey collection, which include shirts inspired from as far back as the 1960s as well as their 2005 home shirt, beloved because of its association with the famous Champions League victory in Istanbul.
Arsenal's famous 1991-1992 'banana' kit was reinterpreted for their 2019-20 away kit.
Nike have recently relaunched their T90 collection, and Adidas' 2026 World Cup away jerseys have the Adidas original Trefoil badge on the chest after 36 years, a re-interpretation of the classic '90s look.
The general rise of retro football shirts has been reported to now be a near £40m business empire by the Classic Football Shirts company.
Jordan Clarke, the founder of Footballerfits, an Instagram platform that explores the link between behind football and fashion culture, says it is not just football fans that are obsessed with nostalgia.
"I think nostalgia is something in society not just in football. A lot of people look back fondly at times during their lives, when they were maybe younger, and there was less worry in the world. They look back and dream of returning to those times.
"Football is just a microcosm of how society feels in the world that we are living in nowadays."
There has been some criticism of the Premier League amid claims it has become dull because of time-wasting tactics, VAR intervention, fatigue of players and an emphasis on systems rather than individuals.
"The game has got a bit robotic. It's become a lot different to what we have grown up on, so there is less self-expression within the game, less personality on the pitch, with managers wanting to control every aspect of the game," Clarke said.
"I think that players really seek their self-expression through outside things, like fashion, music, other sports or just culture as a whole.
"For me that rise has come from players seeking alternative routes to express themselves when they can't play like Neymar these days, or they can't do the things that the players they grew up watching were doing."

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