In the summer of ‘96, as a 14-year-old English kid in love with soccer and in awe of the UEFA European Championship on home soil, I saved up and bought my first England jersey: the now classic, Umbro Euro ‘96 white home kit.

Ever since, every World Cup and Euros has meant at least one addition to my collection – often retros, sometimes a goalie kit, occasionally a training or a travel top, and maybe a bonus t-shirt to take the edge off.

Thirty years later, I have nearly enough England gear to wear something different every day of the World Cup.

CNN Sports will give you behind-the-scenes reporting from the World Cup, expert analysis and point you towards the biggest storylines of the day. Click here to sign up for the newsletter (it’s free!).

Unfortunately, the shift in fashion from baggy 90’s fits to the looser silhouettes of the 2000’s and 2010’s and finally to the snug athletic cut of the 2020’s has negatively correlated with my ever expanding waistline. So, as I have gotten bigger, my kits have not. Any further physical inflation could result in every single shirt immediately and simultaneously becoming obsolescent – come back here in four years’ time for the 2030 World Cup update.