{"id":477307,"date":"2015-12-22T14:48:35","date_gmt":"2015-12-22T19:48:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.snkrsday.com\/?p=477307"},"modified":"2022-09-17T14:48:01","modified_gmt":"2022-09-17T19:48:01","slug":"performance-review-nike-kd-8-sizing-is-everything","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.snkrsday.com\/performance-review-nike-kd-8-sizing-is-everything\/","title":{"rendered":"Performance Review \/\/ Nike KD 8: Sizing Is Everything"},"content":{"rendered":"
words & images \/\/ Nick DePaula:<\/strong><\/p>\n When you play basketball, you want to play fast. You want to attack.<\/p>\n The KD 8<\/a> is one of those rare shoes that propels, pushes and powers you forward. It’s one of my favorite shoes of 2015.<\/p>\n But it didn’t start that way…<\/p>\n Earlier in the summer, I got my usual size 13 in the V8 launch colorway. Like always, I was hyped as hell to get a new pair of shoes, a feeling that’s been there for me ever since I was 10 years-old. (Which was somehow twenty years ago.)<\/p>\n When you get a new signature shoe in your hands, the joy of heading straight to the gym and jumping right into a game is what it’s all about, and it’s a feeling for young hoopers that Nike has tried to carry over into their new generation of signatures lines for Bron, Kobe, KD and now Kyrie.<\/p>\n The first night in my V8s, I was hugely disappointed. The shoe fit too long, and the way that the heel outsole protrudes juuuust a little too far out made it feel like I was almost wearing swimming flippers. The tooling felt like it was too big for the upper, and the outsole seemingly extended too far out beyond the full-length bottom-loaded Zoom bag.<\/p>\n I got in the car to head on home and wondered if Nike had somehow blown it, on what was BY FAR Kevin’s most expensive sneaker yet, at a steep steep $180. This after Nike very publicly stepped up to the plate to re-sign KD to a wild multi-hundred million dollar long-term endorsement extension.<\/p>\n This was also a series that started out ever so innocently, at $85, $85, $88 and then $95 for the first four models. The KD2 and 3 are to this day some of the best basketball sneakers ever made. They were no frills: great traction, a supportive upper and forefoot Zoom Air.<\/p>\n At $180, my expectations for the KD8 were through the roof, and yet I didn’t love any one thing about it that first night out. I played a few more times in them, and truthfully ditched them for a month, going back to my HyperRev 2015s and CP3.8 AEs, which were both GREAT.<\/p>\n