KICKS TOP 100 – SLAM https://www.slamonline.com Respect the Game. Tue, 25 Apr 2023 20:45:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.slamonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/cropped-android-icon-192x192-32x32.png KICKS TOP 100 – SLAM https://www.slamonline.com 32 32 SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked No. 5 https://www.slamonline.com/kicks/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-no-5/ https://www.slamonline.com/kicks/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-no-5/#respond Tue, 25 Apr 2023 20:45:04 +0000 https://www.slamonline.com/?p=778021 It’s a hard question: What do you get the most precocious ballplayer in NBA history? Their own signature sneaker, of course. Kobe Bryant entered the NBA fresh out of the Lower Merion (PA) High prom as a 17-year-old in the soon-to-be-famous ’96 NBA Draft. With Bryant’s most high-profile basketball success having come at the adidas […]

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked No. 5 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
It’s a hard question: What do you get the most precocious ballplayer in NBA history? Their own signature sneaker, of course. Kobe Bryant entered the NBA fresh out of the Lower Merion (PA) High prom as a 17-year-old in the soon-to-be-famous ’96 NBA Draft. With Bryant’s most high-profile basketball success having come at the adidas ABCD Camp in the summer of ’95, it was no shock he came in the League rocking the Three Stripes. Bryant spent an up-and-down rookie season wearing adi’s Feet You Wear models, like the EQT Elevation. While some haters looked at Bryant’s rookie year struggles to earn big minutes and a rough-shooting elimination game in the playoffs as proof he wasn’t ready for primetime, smart observers recognized the Dunk Contest win, the fact he was bold enough to be taking important shots in the postseason and that he was only 18 as obvious positives. This included adidas, which ushered Kobe into his sophomore campaign with his very own sig: The KB8.

Named in honor of his uniform number, the curvy, almost dream-like (I see puffy clouds) KB8 was considered an addition to the Feet You Wear line that Bryant had rocked previously, with its round edges making the silhouette extra agile, comfortable and good looking. The KB8’s tech features—mesh lining, EVA midsoles and adi’s Torsion system—made it one of the most advanced basketball shoes to hit the market. Unsurprisingly to those who know the game, Bryant’s second season in the NBA represented a major step forward: he started the All-Star Game, upped his scoring average to 15.4 ppg and helped the Lakers reach the Western Conference Finals for the first of many times in his career. On the court, his star only grew. Adidas rode Kobe’s wave straight through a number of signature releases and three straight NBA championships before the brand and player had a falling out during the 2002 offseason.

After an epic ’02-03 sneaker free agent season that saw Bryant play in a variety of non-adidas sneakers, he famously signed with Nike and wore the Swoosh for the remainder of his career. A 20-year Laker who scored more points than anyone ever has in the iconic purple and gold (mostly wearing Nikes), Kobe is thought of by many fans as a Nike guy, which is fine. But old heads know: Kobe entered the game in adidas, and when history carved out a pair for him, it was the KB8. Bryant’s departure from adidas meant the brand could no longer use his name or initials on any product, but adidas knew a winning shoe when they had one. Rechristened the Crazy 8 and retroed for the first time in ’07, the classic kicks have been seen on the likes of Derrick Rose (during his ’10-11 MVP campaign, no less), Justin Bieber (during the 2011 Celebrity All-Star Game) and various young adidas NBA athletes through the years. They cause a stir every time they come back on the market. Clearly, Crazy 8s will be here forever.

BUY YOUR COPY OF SLAMKICKS PRESENTS TOP 100: THE GREATEST BASKETBALL SNEAKERS OF ALL TIME

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked No. 5 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
https://www.slamonline.com/kicks/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-no-5/feed/ 0
SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 4 https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-at-no-4/ https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-at-no-4/#respond Fri, 21 Apr 2023 19:26:21 +0000 https://www.slamonline.com/?p=777598 The Air Jordan I may not hold the No. 1 spot on this list, but there’s little doubt that it’s the most important model in the history of basketball sneakers—hell, maybe sneakers period, of any category. In a literal sense, the Air Jordan I kickstarted the most popular signature sneaker line in hoops history: Air […]

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 4 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
The Air Jordan I may not hold the No. 1 spot on this list, but there’s little doubt that it’s the most important model in the history of basketball sneakers—hell, maybe sneakers period, of any category. In a literal sense, the Air Jordan I kickstarted the most popular signature sneaker line in hoops history: Air Jordans. In a historical sense, the Air Jordan I was responsible for the beginning of the basketball sneaker industry as we know it today.

“Before Michael Jordan, sneakers were just for playing basketball,” writer Roy S. Johnson said in the Netflix documentary The Last Dance. “All of a sudden, sneakers became fashion and culture.” Indeed, MJ’s marriage with Nike would redefine the sport’s connection with style, creativity and the intersection between hoops and pop culture. And it all began with the Air Jordan I.

The AJ I is even more popular now than it was when it first came out. Nearly 40 years later, the classic silhouette is so special that you see it everywhere from weddings to NFL football fields. The I is made up of the iconic Air Jordan “Wings” logo, the instantly recognizable Swoosh, the leather upper and Nike Air logo on the tongue. The Jordan I got its first re-release in 1994 (one of the first-ever retros, mind you), and in recent years, collabs with the likes of Off-White, Dior and Fragment have kicked the Jordan I’s high-fashion game into overdrive.

It’s perhaps no surprise that the super-OG AJ I would be a favorite among disruptors in fashion and music. After all, this was a sneaker born to shake shit up. See, before the Air Jordan I, basketball shoes were all cookie-cutter, white-based colorways. Sure, maybe the three stripes of your adidas Pro Model or the Swoosh on your Nike Blazer had team accent colors, but that’s about it. When the Air Jordan I burst on the scene in 1985, it was among the first pairs with multiple colors to be worn in the NBA. That might sound funny to you now, but at the time, having so much color on the sneaker was so groundbreaking that it actually violated the League’s uniform policy. Yup, the original black/red colorway of the Nike Air Ship (the style Jordan wore until the I was available) earned Mike a $5,000 fine every time he stepped on the court, which only made the “Banned Is” even more legendary for fans of His Airness.

In 2023, between all the advanced technology available to serious hoopers and the “don’t crease my Js” mentality of most sneakerheads, it’s safe to say the Jordan I is more popular off the court than on it. But in 1985, the Air Jordan I was about as advanced a basketball shoe as you could make, with its newfangled Nike Air cushioning and plush leather quarter panels. And in March 1998, MJ’s final season with Chicago, he pulled out an OG pair of Jordan Is for his last game in a Bulls uniform at The Garden—and promptly dropped 42 points on the Knicks in the Bulls’ 102-89 victory, proving that they were always good enough for the GOAT.

BUY YOUR COPY OF SLAMKICKS PRESENTS TOP 100: THE GREATEST BASKETBALL SNEAKERS OF ALL TIME

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 4 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-at-no-4/feed/ 0
SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 3 https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-at-no-3/ https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-at-no-3/#respond Thu, 20 Apr 2023 16:31:59 +0000 https://www.slamonline.com/?p=777589 There it was one day, nice and clear, in the middle of a soccer match: an epiphany. Kobe Bryant was gifted with a thought while watching the beautiful game. Soccer players wore incredibly low-cut boots on the pitch. The height of their boots gave their ankles much more natural range of motion. Bryant wanted something […]

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 3 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
There it was one day, nice and clear, in the middle of a soccer match: an epiphany. Kobe Bryant was gifted with a thought while watching the beautiful game. Soccer players wore incredibly low-cut boots on the pitch. The height of their boots gave their ankles much more natural range of motion. Bryant wanted something similar for his on-court sneakers. It wouldn’t even take two decades for the realization to pay off. By the middle of the 2010s, lows on basketball courts were common, and here in the 2020s, the majority of players wear them. 

But that doesn’t mean it was easy. A reinforced wall of doubt and skepticism stood in between Kobe and his desire back in the mid-2000s. Not many understood the vision, and far fewer were willing to welcome the future of basketball sneakers. 

The prevailing knowledge was that low-cut sneakers would be unsafe. Players wore mids and highs because of the perception that the extra height safe-guarded their ankles. But clunky and heavy sneakers, mixed with tight tape jobs and bulky ankle braces, were actually way more dangerous. The secret lay waiting in ankle strengthening stretches and proper heel lockdown. 

Bryant and legendary Nike Basketball designer Eric Avar believed in the future so much that they burst through the wall and arrived on the other side with the low-cut Kobe 4. They refined that concept with the Kobe 5. Bryant won back-to-back championships with those. And with nearly two straight calendar years of basketball played in those silhouettes, the ever-meticulous Bean gathered up all of his findings. And it was the Kobe 6 that became the masterpiece. 

Even lower than the 4 and the 5, the 6’s foundation used Nike Zoom cushioning in the heel, a Met Zoom Air unit in the forefoot, a Phylon midsole and a carbon fiber shank. The upper was triple-layered. Under the surface, a standard mesh interacted with Flywire cables. Flywire, also seen on the Kobe 4 and the 5, is what allowed Avar to go lower. The cables were placed strategically in spots where the foot endures extreme stress, and their durability let Avar shed a ton of unnecessary materials. 

Above the mesh and the Flywire, Bryant introduced the basketball world to the land of snakes. The Kobe 6 coincided with the debut of his Black Mamba alter ego. Always inspired by nature and the animal kingdom, Bean had found a kinship with the highly venomous killer from sub-Saharan Africa whose venom helps it make easy work of mice, birds, squirrels and, yes, even humans. Bryant wanted everyone to know that he was the top of the top, the most unforgiving and feared player in the NBA. The final layer of the Kobe 6’s upper was made of a faux-snakeskin material. 

Kobe’s mind made the connection between soccer and basketball—two of his great passions—and millions of people followed. The 6 has become the most coveted of his already highly sought-after line. Colorways flooded in and continue to do so. 

After all these years, the epiphany’s light continues to guide the way.

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 3 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-heres-what-basketball-sneaker-we-ranked-at-no-3/feed/ 0
SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 1 https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-no-1/ https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-no-1/#respond Wed, 19 Apr 2023 16:30:12 +0000 https://www.slamonline.com/?p=777526 We ranked the 100 best basketball sneakers ever based on defining moments, performance, aesthetics and cultural impact. We know you’re gonna disagree so let the debates begin… No. 1: Air Jordan XI SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: The Greatest Basketball Sneakers of All Time Empires rise and fall. The idea of revolution leads to the action […]

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 1 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
We ranked the 100 best basketball sneakers ever based on defining moments, performance, aesthetics and cultural impact. We know you’re gonna disagree so let the debates begin…


No. 1: Air Jordan XI

SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: The Greatest Basketball Sneakers of All Time

Empires rise and fall. The idea of revolution leads to the action of destruction as the new tries to overtake the old. The course of empires has looked mostly the same for millennia. The fight for power, the victory. Generations of this cycle went unbroken for decades and decades. 

Until Michael Jordan showed up. 

He has ruled two kingdoms at the same time for over 30 years. On the basketball court, he is a six-time champion and Olympic Gold medalist, the universally agreed-upon greatest of all time. Off the court, his sneakers have carved the land with all the force of centuries-old erosion, sculpting the basketball map to his liking and leaving it marked with his indelible footprints. 

The best of his empire is the Air Jordan XI. It’s the ultimate treasure. It shines like a precious stone discovered deep within the heart of a faraway mountain. The patent leather that’s made it the basketball sneaker supreme holds a radiance that has endured since May 7, 1995, when MJ showed his loyal subjects the promise of tomorrow. Tomorrow came on November 10, 1995, when the XI finally released. 

The “Concords” led the way. That white and black version dotted with purple let everyone finally see the patent leather, the carbon fiber support plate and the nylon cordura upper. It let them feel the texture of the basketball net-inspired laces and feel the cushioning of the full-length Air bag. It let them hold the best ever in their hands. 

Tinker Hatfield, the Michael Jordan of sneaker design, was inspired by cars, lawnmowers, backpacks and an airport. And, of course, by the emperor himself. 

Michael had asked Hatfield and the team at Nike for a shiny sneaker during the Air Jordan IX’s creation process. It didn’t happen with that pair, but by the time Jordan was ready to return from his famous 18-month stint as a baseball player, Hatfield was also ready to present him with the XI. 

Tink had clocked how lawnmowers were being designed with a sleekness and a direct desire to be “cool,” much like how cars were being designed to look fast. And in those same cars, he had seen the glossy finishes that convertibles of the day featured, just as he had seen that the roof of Denver’s airport had a shiny top. The sum of Tinker’s observations was the XI, the very pinnacle of basketball footwear. 

It was worn by the greatest player ever during the greatest single season ever. Jordan and the Bulls went 72-10 in ’95-96, the season that saw the XI on the floor. Number 23 snatched up the All-Star Game MVP, the regular season MVP, the Finals MVP and his fourth overall championship. 

The genius of the best basketball sneaker ever steered the course of His Airness’ empire straight into forever.


SLAMKICKS Top 100 is available now in this exclusive Gold Metal Edition.

Photos via Getty Images.

The post SLAMKICKS Presents TOP 100: Here’s What Basketball Sneaker We Ranked at No. 1 appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-no-1/feed/ 0
SLAMKICKS Presents Top 100: The Greatest Basketball Sneakers of All Time https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-the-greatest-basketball-sneakers-of-all-time/ https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-the-greatest-basketball-sneakers-of-all-time/#respond Wed, 19 Apr 2023 16:27:23 +0000 https://www.slamonline.com/?p=777538 Let me begin this issue by acknowledging that these kinds of lists automatically create division. I know there are pairs missing from here that mean the world to people, in the same way that I know there are pairs whose rankings on here will make people curse me out on social media. This list was […]

The post SLAMKICKS Presents Top 100: The Greatest Basketball Sneakers of All Time appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
Let me begin this issue by acknowledging that these kinds of lists automatically create division. I know there are pairs missing from here that mean the world to people, in the same way that I know there are pairs whose rankings on here will make people curse me out on social media. This list was made with the following criteria: cultural impact, defining moments, aesthetics and performance.

Now that you have the criteria in your mind, hopefully all 100 of these sneakers make sense to you. 

I stand by this list wholeheartedly. When we made SLAM Presents JORDANS Vol. 6: The Air Jordan XI, we very clearly and very definitively put “The Best Basketball Sneaker of All Time” on that cover. That was my true belief before we made that issue and it remains after making this issue. From that No. 1 spot and onwards, we extensively combed basketball sneaker history. I spent days writing down over 300 different sneakers that could’ve been on here and then we—sneakerheads and basketball nerds on the SLAM staff spanning multiple generations—spent a whole bunch of time arguing with each other to hammer out the list that you’re about to read. 

For all those who think I’m foolish for putting the Air Jordan I in the fourth slot and for all those who recognize I know my stuff by including the Nike Hyperfuse 2011 on this list, I welcome you all. This type of stuff is where it gets fun. So let’s have some fun, SLAM Fam. 

As always, wear your damn kicks. 

Peace,

Max Resetar


Which basketball sneakers made our list? Let the debates begin…

No. 1

Worn by the greatest player ever during the greatest single season ever.

No. 3

These kicks coincided with the debut of Kobe’s Black Mamba alter ego.

The post SLAMKICKS Presents Top 100: The Greatest Basketball Sneakers of All Time appeared first on SLAM.

]]>
https://www.slamonline.com/the-magazine/kicks-top-100/slamkicks-presents-top-100-the-greatest-basketball-sneakers-of-all-time/feed/ 0