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  2. Sporting colours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporting_colours

    Sporting colours or just colours [1] (sometimes with a modifier, e.g. club colours or school colours) are awarded to members of a university or school who have excelled in a sport. Many schools do not limit their use to sport but may also give colours for academic excellence or non-sporting extra-curricular activities, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Colours ...

  3. Blue (university sport) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_(university_sport)

    Athletes at the University of Cambridge may be awarded a full blue (or simply a blue), half blue, first team colours or second team colours for competing at the highest level of university sport, which must include being in a varsity match or race against the University of Oxford. A full blue is the highest honour that may be bestowed on a ...

  4. Olympic symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympic_symbols

    Sport : Proportion: 2:3: Adopted: 14 August 1920: Design: Five interlaced rings of equal dimensions (the Olympic rings), used alone, in one or in five different colours. When used in its five-colour version, these colours shall be, from left to right, blue, yellow, black, green, and red.

  5. School colors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_colors

    Princeton University's store, featuring the school's orange and black colors. The tradition of school colors appears to have started in England in the 1830s. The University of Cambridge chose Cambridge blue for the Boat Race against the University of Oxford in 1836, [2] Westminster School have used pink as their color since a boat race against Eton School in 1837, [3] and Durham University ...

  6. Kit (association football) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kit_(association_football)

    These are usually based on the colours of the country's national flag, although there are exceptions—the Italy national team, for example, wear blue as it was the colour of the House of Savoy, the Australian team like most Australian sporting teams wear the Australian National Colours of green and gold, neither of which appear on the flag ...

  7. List of international auto racing colours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_international_auto...

    From the beginning of organised motor sport events, in the early 1900s, until the late 1960s, before commercial sponsorship liveries came into common use, vehicles competing in Formula One, sports car racing, touring car racing and other international auto racing competitions customarily painted their cars in standardised racing colours that indicated the nation of origin of the car or driver.

  8. National colours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_colours

    Blue (sports) Faroe Islands: White, blue and red Flanders: Black and yellow Friesland: Blue, white and red Galicia: Sky blue and white Gibraltar: Red and white Guernsey: Red and white Green (sports) See Flag of Guernsey: Isle of Man: Red and grey Yellow (sports) Yellow is the colour of the unofficial national football team. Jersey: Red and ...

  9. Sporting Kansas City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporting_Kansas_City

    Sporting Kansas City's official colors are "sporting blue" and "dark indigo" [41] with "lead" as a tertiary color. [42] The primary logo is composed of a teardrop-shaped shield containing a stylized representation of the Kansas–Missouri state line with "sporting blue" stripes on the "Kansas" side and an interlocking "SC" on the "Missouri" side.