SLAM<\/a> later on. That was all really\u00a0back before anyone was doing a lot of the crazy colorway stuff.<\/p>\nWhen he backed out of the Puma deal, he was having this monster year, so everyone was sending him product. We made him the White\/Red, a Black\/White, a Black\/Purple and also a Black\/Red.<\/p>\n
There was a ’15’ on the heel, but it was nothing compared to the customization that they do now. It was a total serif font \u2013 something that you’d use in your email. [laughs]<\/p>\n
We didn’t even know that he was going to wear that shoe in the Dunk Contest, until he really walked out with them on. There was no heads up.<\/p>\n
We were sending him product, and we didn’t even have anyone at the Dunk Contest. There was nobody even there from the company.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
4 _ THE DUNK CONTEST<\/h2>\n
At the turn of the century, the league’s annual Dunk Contest was on life support. We weren’t quite yet to the disastrous “Dunk Wheel” era a few years later, but everyone could sense that All-Star Saturday Night’s featured event was losing its luster. The days of Mike and Nique were long gone, and a new savior was needed, badly.<\/p>\n
Thanks to the 1998-1999 lockout, there wasn’t actually an All-Star Weekend during Vince’s rookie year. In many ways, that only heightened the\u00a0anticipation and expectations for what was to come that storied night in Oakland.<\/p>\n
“I felt like I could jump to the moon,” Carter told USA Today just after the Dunk Contest.<\/p>\n
To this day, his series of five dunks at the NBA’s 2000 All-Star Weekend is considered one of the league’s most iconic moments. Donning Toronto’s sleekened new sans-Dino unis, Carter put on a display of raw power, pure athleticism and imagination that powered the concept of dunking into a new millennium.<\/p>\n
As the unknowing AND1 execs each realized in real time as they were tuning in on TV, Carter did it all in their new Tai Chi sneaker.<\/p>\n
***
\n<\/strong>Ryan Drew:<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\nI was actually in Seattle at the time, on vacation. I had just had a newborn baby, and my oldest son now is a senior in High School. He was one month old then. I was in Seattle, and on my way to a wedding. My wife is like, \u201cWe gotta get out of here.\u201d And I go, \u201cBut the Dunk Contest is on!!\u201d [laughs]<\/p>\n
Then, Vince rolls out with the Tai Chis on…<\/p>\n
I got to the wedding crazy late, cause we were watching the Dunk Contest. Dude, his first round was bananas.<\/em> The very first dunk he did was nuts<\/em>. I’m sitting in my parents’ rental condominium in Kirkland, Washington, watching the Dunk Contest on some 18\u201d inch TV screen, and I’m going absolutely bananas.<\/p>\nMy wife is begging me to leave for the wedding, and I couldn’t turn away. We HAD TO<\/em>\u00a0stay until the Dunk Contest was over. I called up Seth and Jay, and just said, \u201cCan you fucking believe what just happened?!\u201d<\/p>\n\u201cIt was almost like the dunks that he had done were tailor made for the colorblocking of the shoe.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Not only was that maybe the best series of dunks I’ve ever seen — because it was just dunks that you’d never even seen before — but it was almost like the dunks that he had done were tailor made for the colorblocking of the shoe. The dunk where he goes between the legs, he’s got one leg up and the ball is under, and you see one half red and one half white.<\/p>\n