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Meyba - Size M - Excellent Condition

Vintage FC Barcelona Meyba Home Shirt 1980s – Original Barça Jersey – Blaugrana

Vintage FC Barcelona Meyba Home Shirt 1980s – Original Barça Jersey – Blaugrana

Regular price $233.00
Regular price Sale price $233.00
Sale Sold out
Taxes included.

Authentic FC Barcelona Meyba home shirt from the early 1980s, featuring the iconic wide Blaugrana stripes and Meyba logo and the classic embroidered crest used in the Maradona/Schuster era.

Cut

Suggested size: M
Label size: M

Measures:
Length - 70cm
Shoulders-47cm
Sleeves-25cm
Width-49cm 📏

Size Guide
  • Suggested size → recommended size based on actual measurements.
  • Size label → size shown on the label (if present).

On vintage garments, the label may not reflect the current fit: washing, alterations, and past fashions may have changed the original dimensions.

Always rely on the measurements provided. For more information, see the dedicated page.

Conditions

The condition of our garments is classified according to the following scale:

  • Deadstock : Like-new condition, no defects. Fabrics and trim are practically new.
  • Very Good : In excellent condition, with any minor imperfections shown in the photos.
  • Good : In good overall condition, with signs of wear or obvious defects shown in the photos.
  • Fair : with obvious wear and visible defects shown in the photos.

Since they are vintage items, they may still have small imperfections or signs of wear that are not always shown.

All items are washed, sanitized, and stain treated before being put on sale. For more information, please visit the dedicated page .

Shipping and Returns

Orders are processed within 1-3 business days and entrusted to the most suitable courier based on the destination and type of package.
Shipping
is free for orders over €100 in Italy and EU countries (zones 1-2) , while in other cases the costs are calculated automatically at checkout.

The right of withdrawal can be exercised within 14 days of delivery . Items must be returned in the same condition in which they were received and as described in the listing.

  • Returns must be requested in advance via email or the contact details indicated on the dedicated page;
  • The refund is issued within 14 days of receipt and verification of the package , and is made net of shipping costs ;
  • Unauthorized returns will not be refunded.

For further details and complete information, please refer to the pages dedicated to Shipping and Returns and Refunds .

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Story Time

Barça in the 1980s: From Kidnappings to Cruyff

The story of Barça in the 1980s isn't a neat collection of iconic moments: it's a veritable soap opera, filled with brilliance, violence, politics, and heartbreak. At the start of the decade, striker Quini was kidnapped at gunpoint after scoring two league goals and held captive for 25 days; without him, Barça's title bid collapsed, and fans still repeat: "That kidnapping cost us La Liga." Soon after, Diego Maradona arrived: bought for a world-record fee, crippled by hepatitis, and then brutally beaten by Andoni Goikoetxea, the "Butcher of Bilbao," who broke his ankle and kept the boot he scored in a display case as a trophy. Yet Maradona produced flashes of pure magic, including the goal at the Bernabéu that even Real Madrid fans applauded. His Barça adventure, however, ended in chaos with the infamous brawl in the 1984 Copa del Rey final, when he responded to Bilbao's provocations with flying kicks and punches in front of the King of Spain.

While all this was happening, Bernd Schuster was leading Barça from midfield, and in 1984–85, under English coach Terry Venables, Barça finally broke an 11-year drought by winning La Liga. The title came thanks to Urruti's decisive last-minute penalty save in Valladolid, immortalized by the commentator shouting: “Urruti, t'estimo!” (“Urruti, I love you!”). Yet even at the height of success, there was pain: in the 1986 European Cup final, Barça missed all four penalties against Steaua Bucharest, losing a trophy they seemed already in the bag.

The second half of the decade was a mixture of internal civil war and rebirth. President Josep Lluís Núñez ruled the club with an iron fist: big-name signings like Gary Lineker arrived, but salaries, power, and respect were constant battlegrounds. In 1988, the situation exploded with the "Hesperia Revolt": 14 veterans and coach Luis Aragonés showed up in a hotel room, publicly accusing Núñez of treating them "like objects." Most were fired; Schuster even joined Real Madrid.

From those ruins came a turning point: Johan Cruyff returned to Barça as coach. In 1988–89, he began to rewrite everything, focusing on youth, obsessing over possession, introducing rondos into training, and developing the 3-4-3 formation inspired by Total Football that would define the modern Barça. With the rebuilt team, Cruyff won the 1989 Cup Winners' Cup against Sampdoria, the first glimpse of the Dream Team that would soon explode.