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Sporting goods makers left red-faced at Euro 2016:
Granit Xhaka of Switzerland shows his ripped PUMA shirt during the Euro 2016 Group A match between Switzerland and France in Lille on Sunday.
Clive Mason/Getty Images
The midfielder, who has recently signed for Arsenal, had to change tops twice during the game. Manufacturer PUMA said in a statement that a "defective material was used in a only a limited number of Swiss home jerseys."
FRANCK FIFE/AFP/Getty Images
PUMA wasn't the only sports goods maker that had problems druing Sunday's game. Swiss midfielder Valon Behrami's studs deflated an Adidas ball as he challenged French forward Antoine Griezmann.
FRANCK FIFE/AFP/Getty Images
The official ball for Euro 2016 retails at $160.
FRANCK FIFE/AFP/Getty
The ball in its fully inflated glory. Adidas predicts its Euro 2016 sponsorship will push its football apparel sales to record levels.
DAMIEN MEYER/AFP/Getty Images
The game itself finished 0-0, a result that ensured France topped Group A, with Switzerland in second.