Football Club Red Bull Salzburg, founded on 13 September 1933, is based in Wals-Siezenheim and competes in the Austrian Bundesliga. This page at Walkouts gathers signed football shirts and memorabilia that reflect the club’s long arc from SV Austria Salzburg to the modern era, pairing historical context with collector provenance and clear authentication cues.
The club plays its home fixtures at the Red Bull Arena, a focal point for supporters and a frequent backdrop for signature photos and framed displays. The organisation was originally SV Austria Salzburg and has appeared under sponsored names such as SV Casino Salzburg and SV Wüstenrot Salzburg, before the ownership change and rebrand in 2005, a moment that altered colours, crests and collector interest.
Domestically Salzburg have been dominant, with a headline record of seventeen league titles and multiple Austrian Cup wins across eras. Their modern run-fourteen titles in seventeen seasons and a sequence of ten straight championships from 2014 to 2023-creates strong demand for shirts from pivotal winning campaigns, league presentation replicas and commemorative releases.
On the continental stage the club’s most notable milestone remains the 1994 UEFA Cup final, reached during the club’s early 1990s peak. That European run, paired with the club’s first Bundesliga title in 1994, means supporters and collectors prize shirts tied to late 1993 and 1994 fixtures and to the tour of European away matches that raised the club’s profile.
Collectors chase a spectrum of items, and importantly many pursuits are not limited to match-worn jerseys. Fans actively collect signed fanshop shirts, early retail runs and player-issue variants released through the club shop, and region-specific retail editions can carry distinct sponsor patches from the SV Casino Salzburg era. For provenance collectors value clear evidence such as item provenance notes, pairing photos and consistent patch placement from supplier eras.
Season and match magnets are particularly prized, for example shirts from the 1993-94 season that bookended the UEFA Cup run, and distinctive kits such as the violet and white away shirt that links to the club’s pre-2005 identity and the 1994 European campaign. These shirts tell a visual story of change, and single-match issue details or print runs from decisive fixtures are often the chase.
Anniversary and milestone productions also surface for collectors, notably pieces tied to the 2005 rebrand, which marked a clear shift in crest and colourway, and items sold with a COA are routinely the most requested by buyers who want documented provenance. Walkouts lists signed retail shirts, framed pieces and limited editions with clear notes on source and authentication, and the strongest interest centres on garments connected to the 1993-94 season and later championship campaigns such as the 2014-15 season.