logo
The best player in the WNBA now has her own shoe. It took a long time.

The best player in the WNBA now has her own shoe. It took a long time.

Time of India10-05-2025

A'ja Wilson
, a center for the Las Vegas Aces, is widely acknowledged as the best player in the
WNBA
. She is something like the league's on-court answer to LeBron James or Michael Jordan.
#Operation Sindoor
India-Pakistan Clash Live Updates| Pak moving troops to border areas? All that's happening
Why India chose to abstain instead of 'No Vote' against IMF billion-dollar funding to Pakistan
How Pak's jihadi general Munir became trapped in his own vice
"I don't shy away from having conversations with her about being the greatest to ever play," said Becky Hammon, who has coached the Aces since 2022.
Wilson was the WNBA's rookie of the year in 2018, was named league MVP in 2020 and 2022, and won a championship in 2022. But while she racked up achievement after achievement, one marker of basketball stardom eluded her: the shoe.
If Wilson were playing in the NBA, she would have long ago gotten a signature shoe, the on-court footwear designed with and for a player. More than two dozen
NBA
players have them.
For years, marketers largely ignored the women's game. But Wilson's star has risen alongside that of the league she plays in, and in early 2023,
Nike
finally told her that it planned to create a signature shoe for her.
Live Events
"
I probably cried for a couple of days," she said.
The plan remained secret, and her fans got angry as Wilson continued to dominate on the court -- winning another championship in 2023 -- without any news of a shoe. Fans were happy last May, however, when Nike announced that it would release her signature shoe, the A'One, this month, alongside an apparel collection.
(The year in between gave them even more reasons to be happy: Wilson became the first player in WNBA history to score 1,000 points in a season, won a third MVP award, was named one of Time magazine's women of the year and had her jersey retired by the University of South Carolina.)
The A'One went on sale Tuesday, with a "Pink Aura" version, making Wilson the first Black WNBA player to have a signature shoe since 2011.
"It's time for people to have a shoe and see a shoe from someone like me, considering it hasn't been done in a long, long time and it comes from a Black female athlete in this world," she said. "I'm grateful."
The 28-year-old was speaking in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighborhood of Paris, at a hotel suite overlooking Le Bon Marché, the famous department store. Her 6-foot-4 frame was dressed in the athletes' off-court uniform of sweats, with jewelry in her ears and on both sides of her nose. She was there on behalf of Nike. It was men's fashion week, so, outside the hotel, photographers waited behind a rope in case celebrities emerged.
The Rise of the WNBA
WNBA players are bigger stars now than they ever were before, arguably with more cultural impact than they had even in the league's heady early days in the 1990s, when players such as Lisa Leslie and Sheryl Swoopes became household names. Last season, interest in the league spiked, buoyed by the popularity of rookies Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese. Brands rushed to play catch-up.
That resurgence has happened in the shoe industry, too, where brands have struggled to monetize products connected to female athletes.
The first WNBA player to have a signature shoe made for her was Swoopes in 1995. Nike's Air Swoopes had a tab on the back that made it easy to put on with the long fingernails she liked to sport. Nike made seven editions of it, the most it has made for any female player to date.
Eight other WNBA players released signature shoes between 1995 and 2001, according to a database kept by ESPN. In 2005 and 2006, Nike made shoes for Diana Taurasi, who starred at the University of Connecticut; for the U.S. women's national team; and for the Phoenix Mercury. After her shoe, Nike didn't make another signature shoe with a women's basketball player until 2023.
Nike wasn't alone in its hiatus. Between 2011, when Adidas released a product with Candace Parker, and 2022, there were no WNBA signature shoes, according to ESPN's database. There just wasn't much of a market, industry observers say.
Women's models make up a small portion of the basketball shoe business, said Matt Powell, a retail analyst with BCE Consulting, in part because many female basketball players prefer wearing a men's shoe.
"It costs a tremendous amount of money to develop a shoe and then to build that shoe," Powell said. "If sales are not going to be huge, and that is the history of what we've seen, any brand is like, 'How much of an investment can we make here?'"
That all started to change when women's college basketball became more popular. Social media allowed players to create personal brands, and in 2021, the NCAA shifted its rules to allow athletes to capitalize on name, image and likeness (NIL) deals, increasing their visibility with commercials and other advertisements.
Broadcast channels helped, too: ESPN began televising the NCAA women's tournament in 1996 but did not air the championship game on its broadcast network, ABC, until 2023. Reese's Louisiana State team defeated Clark's Iowa for that title, drawing nearly 10 million viewers.
The 2024 championship game drew 18.9 million viewers, beating the men's championship game by about 4 million, according to Nielsen. That interest has trickled up into the WNBA as the players moved there, too.
In July 2023, Nielsen reported a rise in interest generally in women's sports. It also said surveyed viewers were frustrated by a lack of access to live women's sports and a lack of media coverage.
"Sneaker companies are always reactive to the public, and they're always responsive to what they perceive as popular at a given time," said Brandon Wallace, an assistant professor at Indiana University who has studied the industry.
Sabrina Ionescu's shoe came out in 2023, her fourth WNBA season, all with the New York Liberty. It was Nike's first unisex shoe and is one of the most popular shoes for NBA players to wear during games. Players have said they like its look, which includes intricate embroidery and customizable colors, and how it feels on their feet. The structure is similar to Kobe Bryant's shoe, which revolutionized the industry.
Nick DePaula, a journalist who covers the sneaker industry, said he expected Wilson's to be popular among the men as well -- in part because of its design (he cited "the grip and the support and the lightweight element") and in part out of solidarity.
"She's worn LeBrons for years and supported his line," DePaula said, referring to the Los Angeles Lakers superstar, who also has a deal with Nike. "There's an element of players excited for her personally."
The Miami Heat's Bam Adebayo, who has been romantically connected to Wilson, has already worn her shoe in a game, before its release.
Powell, the industry analyst, also said he believed that Wilson's shoe would do well among women's basketball shoes, in part because of the heightened interest in the WNBA and in part because of its relatively low price. Adult sizes are $110 and children's $90, compared with $190 for James' signature shoes or $130 for the Sabrina 2.
The Caitlin Clark Comparison Game
The launch of Wilson's shoe has not come without controversy.
In April 2024, when news broke that Nike was planning a signature shoe for Clark, then heading into her rookie season with the Indiana Fever, it set off a firestorm.
The news of Wilson's shoe wasn't public yet. Her fans wondered if racism played a part in giving Clark, who is white, a shoe before the much more professionally accomplished Wilson, especially since the only other active players with signature shoes -- Ionescu and Breanna Stewart, a two-time MVP -- are white.
Others noted Clark's exceptional popularity: She was selling out arenas and causing opponents to move their games to bigger venues. Games in which she played set viewership records.
Strangers debated Wilson's merits. Some said that her personality wasn't charming enough, or that her style of play lacked charisma. Frontcourt players are sometimes thought to be less marketable because their style of play is often less flashy.
"It was very hard for me to navigate, only because in the back of my mind I'm like, 'Yes, I know a shoe's coming, but I really have nothing to share,'" Wilson said. "And to constantly be in those conversations and constantly having my name dragged through the mud and having my resume dragged through the mud is really hard."
When the shoe was announced, Nike leaned into the controversy: Wilson wore a sweatshirt that had "Of Course I Have A Shoe Dot Com" written on it.
Now, some writers and fans are wondering why Clark isn't getting her shoe alongside Wilson.
A prominent Substack sports columnist, Ethan Strauss, suggested that Nike was delaying Clark's shoe because of Wilson's coming product, calling it "corporate malpractice" to not cash in on Clark's popularity.
Tanya Hvizdak, Nike's vice president of global sports marketing, said Nike was not delaying Clark's shoe for Wilson. She said creating a signature shoe took time and disagreed with the characterization that it had taken too long for Wilson to be awarded a shoe.
"What I would say is we've been supporting our women's basketball athletes for 40 years," Hvizdak said.
Powell, the analyst, said Nike's recent struggles as a business and its overhaul last year were instructive as well.
With Nike's stock price falling and cultural relevance slipping, its board announced the abrupt retirement of its CEO, John Donahue, in September and said Elliott Hill would replace him. Hill had spent 32 years with the company before retiring in 2020.
"I think we would have seen the Caitlin shoe a lot faster if Elliott had been at the helm," Powell said. "His predecessor just did not appreciate product and the value of endorsement."
Nike is expected to announce a shoe soon with Paige Bueckers, the first pick in this year's WNBA draft. Reese, who plays for the Chicago Sky, has a shoe in the works with Reebok and has already released lifestyle shoes for day-to-day wear.
A Move Into Fashion
It confuses the people close to Wilson that marketing opportunities have come more slowly than her basketball accolades.
"She's a supportive person," said Sydney Colson, a teammate for the last three seasons and one of Wilson's closest friends. "And not even just superstars, but people like that are just rare to come by."
Wilson decorates the lockers of her teammates for their birthdays and buys a cake celebrating Pride for her gay teammates each year. Last year's Pride cake was pink with disco balls, rainbow frosting and lettering that spelled, cheekily, "Hooray you gay."
Wilson is also outspoken. When James signed a $154 million contract with the Lakers during her rookie year, she posted a tweet saying the WNBA's best were hoping just to reach $1 million. At the time, the league's top players made salaries of $115,500. Wilson will make $200,000 this season, which opens May 16.
Nike and Wilson declined to comment on the size of their overall deal, but The Wall Street Journal and The Athletic have reported that Clark's Nike deal is worth $28 million over eight years.
Wilson has not shied away from discussing the impact of race on why she is sometimes called not marketable.
"It's 100% about race," she said. "And it's one of those things where we can sit there and say that all the time, but there's going to always be someone that's like, 'Well, no, you're just making it about race.'"
As new opportunities have come her way, Wilson has used them to cultivate her image. She has especially leaned into the fashion world's recent embrace of her; Vogue and GQ, for instance, featured her last month in a spread related to the Met Gala in New York City.
The collection with Nike includes single-leg leggings like the ones that Wilson popularized in the WNBA, made in hot pink, and a hot-pink sweatshirt with satin-lined hood (because her mother got tired of seeing her wearing a bonnet at the airport, Wilson said).
When she went on tour last year for her book, "Dear Black Girls," her team approached designer Sergio Hudson -- who has dressed Michelle Obama, former Vice President Kamala Harris, Beyoncé, Rihanna and Jennifer Lopez -- to outfit her.
He knew Wilson was stylish, and he liked the idea of supporting a WNBA player, especially one from his home state, South Carolina.
"When I saw her walk out in the first outfit we made for her, I was like, 'This girl is a star,'" Hudson said.
"At that time, it wasn't how it is now," he said. "It wasn't that long ago, but it's like overnight things have shifted and the WNBA girls are prime celebrities, and everybody wants to dress them."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Allisha Gray stars as Dream crush Mystics 89-56 in WNBA Commissioner's Cup
Allisha Gray stars as Dream crush Mystics 89-56 in WNBA Commissioner's Cup

Time of India

time38 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Allisha Gray stars as Dream crush Mystics 89-56 in WNBA Commissioner's Cup

Allisha Gray delivered a sensational performance, pouring in a career-high 32 points as the Atlanta Dream dismantled the Washington Mystics 89-56 in their WNBA Commissioner's Cup Sunday clash. Gray went 10-for-14 from the field, including 6-of-9 from beyond the arc, spearheading a franchise-record 18 three-pointers for the Dream. Alongside her, Rhyne Howard added 14 points and Te-Hina Paopao chipped in 16. Atlanta's balanced attack and relentless pressure saw them dominate the second half, outscoring Washington 44-22 after halftime. — WNBA (@WNBA) The Dream showcased superb team basketball in their dominant win over the Mystics, recording 24 assists on 31 made field goals. Live Events Te-Hina Paopao and Naz Hillmon led the playmaking with five assists each, while Hillmon added 10 points and a game-high 11 rebounds off the bench. The Dream caught fire from beyond the arc, drilling eight 3-pointers in the second quarter alone and riding Allisha Gray's hot hand - she hit 3-of-4 from deep in the opening frame. Jade Melbourne accounted for two of the Mystics' three made three-pointers, finishing with eight points off the bench. Sonia Citron led the Mystics with 10 points. The Dream built an 11-point halftime lead and never looked back, holding Washington to 18-of-61 shooting.

ASICS to boost India sportswear production to 40% amid import restrictions
ASICS to boost India sportswear production to 40% amid import restrictions

Business Standard

timean hour ago

  • Business Standard

ASICS to boost India sportswear production to 40% amid import restrictions

ASICS, which competes with global rivals including Nike, Adidas, and Skechers USA in India, plans to open three new franchise stores per month between now and the end of the year Reuters Japanese sportswear giant ASICS will ramp up India manufacturing to 40% from 30% over the next few years to ensure steady supply, a top executive told Reuters, as the country's regulations force global brands to pause imports of footwear. The Indian government has mandated certain standards for various footwear segments, requiring both domestic and foreign manufacturers to obtain quality certifications. ASICS, which has also paused imports, said bringing in footwear from any country is not feasible without government certification. "To address this critical situation, we are strategically developing local production capabilities," ASICS India Managing Director Rajat Khurana said. For financial year 2024-25, ASICS reached 30% local production, a government-mandated threshold that allows foreign brands to operate their own single-brand stores in India. The firm, which operates roughly 125 stores through franchise partners, plans to open its first brand-owned store this year and is scouting locations in and around Delhi and Mumbai, Khurana said. It aims to set up a couple more over the next few years. ASICS, which competes with global rivals including Nike, Adidas, and Skechers USA in India, also plans to open three new franchise stores per month between now and the end of the year. For 2024-25, ASICS projected revenue growth of 35%-37% in India, following a 26% jump in the previous fiscal year that lifted its revenue to Rs.428 crores. Known for its running shoes, ASICS is benefiting from a growing fitness culture in India and rising interest in tennis and pickleball among affluent urban consumers. The local sporting goods and apparel category is expected to double to $58 billion by 2030 from 2023 levels, according to a 2024 report by consultancy firm Deloitte.

#BoycottNike trends after brand's collab with 'anti-India' Bangladeshi influencer goes viral
#BoycottNike trends after brand's collab with 'anti-India' Bangladeshi influencer goes viral

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

#BoycottNike trends after brand's collab with 'anti-India' Bangladeshi influencer goes viral

The past few months have been difficult for India geopolitically and internally. Various incidents such as terrorist killings and airplane crashes have left the nation to solve numerous troubles consecutively. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now While earlier the information on such serious incidents was solely handled by the government and the media, with the oncoming of social media every self-informed and self-proclaimed journalist/influencer has taken it upon themselves to share a unique piece of information with the public with no substantiable proof. Recently, Nike launched its first-ever Indian brand collaboration with a Delhi-based brand NorBlack NorWhite. The colourful footwear and apparel collection is inspired by the country's ancient art of tie-dying called "bandhani." The collection created alongside Canadian-born designers Mriga Kapadiya and Amrit Kumar 'invites women into sport' while celebrating 'Indian culture and craftsmanship,' according to a Nike press release. According to a Statista report, in 2023 Nike's revenue in India reached around 12 billion Indian rupees. While the product faces strong competition from Reebok, Adidas and other local brands in India, it still garners a huge market in it. Thus, the news of the brand's first-ever India-specific collection was exciting and awaited by the customers. However, recently a social media post promoting the collaboration went viral all over the internet attracting backlash from Indians across the world. Why so? Let's take a closer look. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Nike's first-ever Indian collaboration faces backlash Image credits: X/@prashant10gaur Well, the promotional post featured a US-based Bangladeshi influencer Naley, alongside another model, donning some creations from the collection. After the announcement, the influencer's problematic views on India's territorial integrity went viral. Social media reactions People on various platforms such as Instagram and X have been calling out for a boycott of Nike for including an anti-India influencer in a campaign for an Indian collection. "What's a Bangladeshi doing on Indian Ad?? That too a paid propaganda lady who spreads hatred against India!!" commented a social media user under the influencer's Instagram post. "if Nike is endorsing people who disrespect India, let's #BoycottNike" wrote a user on X. "Nike's first-ever brand collaboration in India. With a woman who openly claims that Jammu & Kashmir is not part of India. Speak up or stay silent. But don't buy. Share Max 🚨🚨#BoycottNike" added another. "@Nike my single penny wont go to you until she is removed." commented an X user. The protest against the brand's promotional post seems to continue with more and more people joining in.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store