Hyderabad: In 1975 when the idea of maiden cricket World Cup came into effect, teams appeared in front of fans wearing white kits and matches were 60 overs affairs. The only coloured thing was in the mix was the red ball, which is predominantly used in Test cricket.
For the first four World Cups, whites kits and red balls were used. The first major overhaul in One-Day-International Cricket World Cup took place in 1992 when coloured jerseys replaced white kits and white ball replaced the red ball to give Down Under World Cup a brand new touch.
Reducing the overs to 50 from 60 also made the World Cup gripping and intriguing.
However, the introduction of coloured jersey to the World Cup didn't happen suddenly and it was not a fluke. It was a well-thought move which changed the outlook of cricket forever.
The introduction of rainbow jersey in the ODI cricket began with Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket way back in 1978, when a WSC West Indies XI took on WSC Australia XI for the first ever day-night match.
Fans were amused by the move as colours added a unique flavour to ODI cricket. It turned out to be a genius marketing move for the organisers. WSC Australia XI were dressed in wattle gold, while WSC West Indians came out on coral pink.
The match at the Sydney Cricket Ground also first saw the use of white balls and black sightscreens.
Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket- the change agent
No doubt Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket boosted the growth of ODI cricket. More than 50,000 people had crammed themselves inside the stadium to become witnesses of the historic event.
Though Australia witnessed the introduction of day-night cricket and coloured jersey in the 80s, it took ICC to make them norm in 1990s. The move culminated in 1992 World Cup Down Under that saw many firsts.
This was also the first World Cup that saw South Africa featuring in it after serving the notorious apartheid era.
Though all participating teams of the 1992 World Cup wore coloured kits cricket fans had to wait for eight more years to see all cricket teams adopting the coloured jerseys in ODI cricket, while Test continues with the traditional whites.
The jersey of the top 8 teams has gone through major changes from time to time.
Team India wore many shades
The Indian ODI jersey had gone through major changes over the decades. It started off in the mid-1980s by being lite blue with a yellow stripe, without 'India' written anywhere. The 1992 World Cup happened to be the first time India wore a deep blue jersey with India written on it. Since then, the jersey went through changes. From blue, yellow to the touch of Indian flag Team India jersey wore many shades.
In 1996 and 1999 World Cup Team India hit the field sporting lite blue jersey which had yellow shade in the middle. In the 2003 World Cup, the lite blue jersey got a navy blue touch on either side. 2007 and 2011 World Cup saw the use of colours of Indian flag on blue jersey while the 2015 World Cup saw 'INDIA' written on whole blue jersey in orange.