{"id":57260,"date":"2009-11-09T16:29:37","date_gmt":"2009-11-09T21:29:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nicekicks.com\/?p=57260"},"modified":"2022-09-13T22:53:54","modified_gmt":"2022-09-14T03:53:54","slug":"more-than-a-pair-of-shoes-marcus-jordan-vs-adidas","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.snkrsday.com\/more-than-a-pair-of-shoes-marcus-jordan-vs-adidas\/","title":{"rendered":"More Than a Pair of Shoes: Marcus Jordan vs. Adidas"},"content":{"rendered":"
Twenty-five years ago a young Michael Jordan was at the center court of controversy following his first games in the NBA. NBA commissioner David Stern “banned” Jordan’s sneakers because they were a “uniform violation” because they didn’t match the shoes worn by the rest of the Chicago Bulls. A quarter century later, Michael Jordan’s son, Marcus Jordan<\/strong>, is at the center of controversy over a similar “uniform violation” in regards to his Air Jordan shoes. While Michael’s shoes caused problems because they were the wrong color, Marcus’ Air Jordans are the wrong brand.<\/p>\n It should be no surprise that Marcus Jordan chooses to wear Air Jordan shoes on court. The shoes hold sentimental value to Marcus, as he grew up watching his father play in Air Jordans. Besides the obvious family connection, Marcus wore Air Jordans en route to winning a State Championship in high school, and probably has more pairs of Air Jordans than executives at Jordan Brand – a subsidiary of Nike formed in 1996.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n <\/p>\n While being recruited by the University of Central Florida, a school with an exclusive Adidas contract for its athletics department, Marcus was promised by UCF coaches that a regional Adidas representative granted special permission for Marcus to wear the shoes In fact , he didn’t sign his letter of intent to play at the University until it was clear there would be no issue in lacing up Jordan-branded sneakers.<\/p>\n Things changed however last week, when Marcus Jordan capped off his all-adidas uniform with a pair of white Air Jordan 12′?the sneakers his father wore when winning his fifth NBA Championship. Even before the final buzzer of the exhibition game, Adidas released a statement that UCF failed to honor its contract and the company would end its relationship with UCF leaving a negotiated six year, $3 Million contract extension out of the question.<\/p>\n |