Worth the hype: the most-wanted trainers of all time?

Jun 30, 2020


The fashion house’s update of Michael Jordan’s classic footwear is set to bring joy to sneakerheads and point 

the way forward for luxury shopping. Is this the restart of hype?

two months ago, it was modish to theorise that consumer desire for extravagant luxury fashion might never 

recover from the pandemic. But two months is a long time in fashion, and this week sees the blockbuster 

must-have come roaring back into style. On 1 July, an online prize draw will decide the lucky few who have 

won the privilege of spending £1,800 on the new Air Dior trainers. Even by the hype standards of the 

sneakerhead world, the buzz around the luxury take on basketball’s most iconic hi-top is breaking pre-

pandemic decibel records.

Next week’s pop-up Selfridges “collection point” for the first Air Jordan 1 OG Dior sneakers will be the first 

luxe iteration of the click-and-collect retail mode that is part of our contactless new normal. The hands-on 

elements of the pop-up had to be shelved to comply with social distancing and sanitising guidelines, but – for 

13 days only – Selfridges aims to bring an experiential element to the process of picking up a pair of pre-

purchased trainers. A bespoke architectural experience “based on the concept of air” features glass walls that 

cloud up with “smoke” to reveal the Air Dior logo, and a real-time countdown showing how many pairs are 

still to be collected.

The Air Jordan is the Rosetta Stone of sneaker history. This was the first trainer to become part of pop 

culture, a serendipitous coming-together of the bouncy Air sole technology that Nike had developed in the 

early 1980s and the gravity-defying magic of Michael Jordan on the basketball court. The Air Dior, which 

swaps out sportswear primary colours for a soft “Wolf Grey” borrowed from the Christian Dior headquarters 

on Avenue Montaigne in Paris and overlays the Nike swoosh with Dior’s own distinctive “oblique” logo, is the 

first luxury link-up in the Air Jordan’s 35-year history. For two bluechip bloodlines of sportswear and luxury, 

this is a royal wedding.

Nonetheless, the story of Air Dior’s hype is, as per the 2020 zeitgeist, a level of craziness that no one saw 

coming. Not even Dior’s menswear designer, Kim Jones, an Air Jordan obsessive who owns more than 40 

pairs himself, unveiled this collaboration at a Miami catwalk show last year, and has designed a summer 

capsule collection including basketball-style long shorts, a sweatshirt with Dior-branded “wings” and a dove-

grey cross-body bag to accompany the sneakers.

The raffle-to-buy concept, which allows only one pair per customer, was conceived by Jones as a device to 

prevent the limited edition of 8,500 sneakers being snapped up by resellers. (A few pairs have, however, 

already found their way on to resale sites, presumably via being gifted to celebrities or influencers. The going 

rate on StockX, if you’re interested, is £10,000.)

Shortly after its original drop date was postponed because of the pandemic, dangling the new-look Air 

Jordans tantalisingly out of consumer reach, the Jordan brand was unexpectedly turbocharged via television. 

The Basketball docuseries The Last Dance, a potentially niche Netflix offering, found a vast fanbase among a 

global audience stuck at home and hungry to indulge in nostalgia for the simpler world of the 20th century, 

and rocketed Michael Jordan back to the pinnacle of pop-culture cool.

A pioneer of peacocking in sportswear, Jordan turned stadiums into his personal catwalks in the 1980s and 

90s with his Nike berets, earrings, supersized tailoring – and, of course, his shoes. Air Jordans became an 

extension of the star’s personal brand to a degree that few collaborations have matched. In the wake of the 

show’s success, Air Jordan mania exploded. Last month, a pair of Air Jordans once worn by the player on 

court, in the iconic red, black and white colourway, sold at a Sotheby’s auction for $560,000 (£455,000) – 

more than three and a half times their initial high estimate, and a new world record for a sneaker auction.

Compared with Sotheby’s prices, £2,000 for a pair of trainers is – well, not exactly a bargain. But certainly not 

the craziest thing to happen this year.

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