Nike Flywire gave the notion of “Flight” some extra might. The Nike
Air Hyperdunk went over the head of its opponents by borrowing a concept
from one of the modern world’s most impressive architectural feats —
suspension bridges. By applying super-strong nylon filaments for precise
support akin to the cables of a bridge, the Nike Air Hyperdunk was able
to radically reduce weight by providing support material only where
it’s needed.
Nike Flywire was originally conceived for featherweight track spikes
by Jay Meschter in Nike’s Innovation Kitchen. Excited by the idea of
removing significant weight out of a basketball upper, the team worked
with the Nike Sports Research Lab to begin analyzing whether these
fibers could withstand the lateral forces of side-to-side cutting in
basketball.
The NSRL recruited one of their favorite big-framed test subjects,
"Jake the Destroyer.” Jake’s habit of punishing early samples was well
known, and high-speed video capture of his foot during hard cuts would
be the first test.
Making believers out of some of the skeptics on the team, the video
showed the early version of Nike Flywire successfully holding the foot
on the footbed of the shoe during the testing.
Lead designer Eric Avar remembers the discussions. “This was one of those projects that created a lot of debate among the team early on.”
Once the Nike Flywire proved its mettle in testing, Avar and the
team’s approach was to create a design that allowed most of the shoe to
fall away into the background in order to make the Flywire in the
midfoot the focal point. Another new Nike innovation, Nike Lunarlon,
would also make its first appearance in a basketball shoe as a key
performance element of a design that borrowed elements from a shoe that,
at the time, was only the stuff of legend, the Nike Mag.
The Nike Hyperdunk seized the global stage when some of the USA
Basketball athletes took to the courts of Beijing looking to recapture
glory. This was a seminal moment for both American hoops and the future
of basketball footwear design.
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