Walkouts Boca Juniors signed football shirts and memorabilia

About

Founded on 3 April 1905, Club Atlético Boca Juniors are rooted in La Boca, Buenos Aires and compete in the Argentine Primera División, a history and presence celebrated by collectors and fans alike, and at Walkouts we present signed football shirts and memorabilia that reflect the club’s long domestic and continental pedigree.

The club play at the iconic La Bombonera, officially the Estadio Alberto J. Armando, and its trophy cabinet includes a headline domestic haul of 35 Primera División championships alongside a remarkable international record of 22 major international titles, achievements that give provenance to framed shirts and match-issued items. Names such as Carlos Bianchi, and academy graduates Oscar Ruggeri and Carlos Tevez, sit alongside the Superclásico as touchpoints for provenance and story-led collecting.

Anniversary releases remain a key search term for collectors, notably milestone recreations such as Centenary 2005, which tie a design to a club celebration and often appear in limited runs or commemorative retail drops. Such shirts are sought for their commemorative patches, special numbering and season-specific provenance that differ from standard fanshop issues.

Season and match magnets include the club’s early rise and international excursions, with strong collector interest in the club’s 1913 promotion to the top flight and landmark tours like the 1925 European tour; shirts from these eras are chased because they connect directly to pivotal moments in Boca’s narrative, and provenance from specific fixtures increases desirability for display pieces and research-led collections.

Away and alternative shirts yield distinct collecting paths, where an iconic look such as a white away shirt linked to continental finals can become shorthand for specific campaigns abroad and for decisive away wins. Collectors prize shirts linked to continental success because they carry match context from stadiums and cities tied to Copa competitions, and such colourways are often memorable in photographic archives and match programmes.

Signed retail demand is strong: fanshop shirts, not only match-worn examples, are collected for early production runs, player-issue variants and region-specific releases, and authenticated retail signatures often carry a COA that supports display and resale provenance. Walkouts lists signed and unsigned retail pieces, player-issue variants and framed shirts, with Free worldwide shipping available for many items.

Collectors will find narrative threads across seasons and fixtures, from the club’s formative rise through the 1913 promotion to landmark overseas tours such as the 1925 European tour, and these specific seasons and matches help confirm player lists, shirt styles and match provenance for any framed shirt or limited edition signed piece, guiding informed selection at sale and display.

Honours

Boca Juniors rank among Argentina's most decorated clubs with a headline collection of 74 official titles, including 35 Primera División championships and 17 domestic cups. The club's continental record is equally notable, with 22 major international titles, 18 of which were organised by CONMEBOL, placing Boca among the leading South American achievers in international competition. Boca also holds an honorary national recognition for its successful European tour in 1925, a milestone often cited in historical honours lists. Their tally of continental trophies leaves them third globally for complete international titles behind a small number of clubs, and the side has repeatedly appeared in IFFHS lists highlighting its sustained international stature. The balance of domestic dominance and continental success has defined Boca's reputation across multiple eras.

Legends & Leadership

Diego Maradona, Silvio Marzolini and Antonio Rattín are remembered as legend players of the early 1980s, the 1960s and the 1960s respectively and their standing predates the millennium while helping to shape Boca's historic identity on the pitch.

Óscar Ruggeri and Martín Palermo are celebrated as legend players of the late 1980s and the mid 1990s respectively and are linked with the club's competitive domestic phases before 2000.

Juan Román Riquelme and Carlos Tevez are recent key players of the mid 2000s and early 2000s respectively and feature among those central to Boca's modern-era squads and continental campaigns.

Carlos Bianchi and Alberto J. Armando stand out as defining non-playing figures with Bianchi the club's legendary manager associated with major continental success and Armando the stadium namesake regarded as a seminal club figure.

Stadium

The club plays at the Estadio Alberto J. Armando, widely known as La Bombonera, a venue whose compact geometry concentrates sound and creates a famously intense matchday atmosphere. Fans pack terraces close to the touchlines so noise and colour are defining characteristics of home fixtures. The ground's dual naming recognises the formal Estadio Alberto J. Armando identity alongside the popular moniker La Bombonera, both used by supporters and the media. Matchdays against River Plate, known as the Superclásico, amplify the stadium's hostile ambience and underline the fixture's place as Argentina's most heated rivalry. The bowl-like layout and passionate crowd make La Bombonera an iconic and intimidating venue for visiting teams.

Also known as
Estadio Alberto J. Armando

FAQ

Q: How many major trophies has Boca Juniors won? A: Boca Juniors has a long trophy history; the club's documented haul includes national and continental titles recorded by official competitions and historical archives.

Q: Where can I buy official club merchandise? A: Official items are listed through the club's authorised channels and typically carry verification such as a COA or digital authentication to confirm provenance.

Q: Do you ship internationally? A: Yes, many official retailers offer international delivery and some listings advertise Free worldwide shipping.

Q: How can I confirm an item's authenticity before purchase? A: Seek direct stamps or labels from the club, look for photographic evidence of signing, or request listed provenance from the seller; official retailer pages and witnessed signing records are the most reliable sources.