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2002/03 Deportivo Wanka Home Football Shirt (S)

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2002/03 Deportivo Wanka Home Football Shirt (S)

2002/03 Deportivo Wanka Home Football Shirt (S)

Condition: 9/10 Superb

Size: Adult Small

Chest Measurement: 37-39 Inches / 95-99 CM

Manufacturer: Polmer

Colour: Green & white, gold trim

Material: Polyester

Seasons: 2002/2003

Player: N/A

Patches: N/A

Official Polmer Deportivo Wanka home football shirt from the 2002/03 season.

Condition of this vintage football jersey is 9/10 – Superb (see photos).

In 2000, Deportivo Pesquero and Deportivo Wanka merged, giving Huancayo access to the Primera División Peruana

The team aroused controversy in 2004 when it moved its base to Cerro de Pasco, the highest city in the world and almost certainly the world's highest venue for professional football, at an altitude of 4,380 m (13,973 ft) above sea level, well above the point where altitude sickness becomes a problem. Its opponents criticised the move as an attempt to stave off relegation by playing in conditions that no other team could tolerate, including hail, rain, near-freezing temperatures and a lack of oxygen from the high altitude. The club was relegated that season anyway.

$457.75

Original: $1,525.82

-70%
2002/03 Deportivo Wanka Home Football Shirt (S)—

$1,525.82

$457.75

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Description

Condition: 9/10 Superb

Size: Adult Small

Chest Measurement: 37-39 Inches / 95-99 CM

Manufacturer: Polmer

Colour: Green & white, gold trim

Material: Polyester

Seasons: 2002/2003

Player: N/A

Patches: N/A

Official Polmer Deportivo Wanka home football shirt from the 2002/03 season.

Condition of this vintage football jersey is 9/10 – Superb (see photos).

In 2000, Deportivo Pesquero and Deportivo Wanka merged, giving Huancayo access to the Primera División Peruana

The team aroused controversy in 2004 when it moved its base to Cerro de Pasco, the highest city in the world and almost certainly the world's highest venue for professional football, at an altitude of 4,380 m (13,973 ft) above sea level, well above the point where altitude sickness becomes a problem. Its opponents criticised the move as an attempt to stave off relegation by playing in conditions that no other team could tolerate, including hail, rain, near-freezing temperatures and a lack of oxygen from the high altitude. The club was relegated that season anyway.