I don't know how much you folks pay for basketball shoes, but I was hoping for $75 or under for a good pair.
Last time I bought sneakers was about 8 years ago. I hit the Li Ning flagship store on a major pedestrian street, the store long since moved. And they had a 2-for-1 sale, so I picked up two pair for about $70. A friend at hoops asked me where I got my new hightops and when I told him about the sale, he went and bought 2 pair also. But they had dropped down the sale price to 2 for $55. So I went back and snapped up another two pair. So oddly bought 4 pairs, for roughly $125, which lasted me these last 8 years.
So today I strolled down the main shopping avenue, and Shanghai's sneaker row, just a few blocks from where I live. Puma was the first stop, and while I didn't see any Clyde's (disappointing) they had a whole series of Ralph Sampson shoes. Billed as Ralph Sampson MVP shoes. Huh? Seems he was the All-Star game MVP in 1985. I guess that's what they are referencing. Anyway quite a time warp.
Nest up, I wanted to buy some TMac Adidas for about $70. A purple and silver number was somewhat snazzy, but they fit oddly. Shaped oddly too. Shoes in China are often not as wide as my feet. Tried to buy some Derrick Rose 10 year anniversary shoes that looked very much like Air Jordans but they didn't have my size. One size up was nearly okay but my heels slipped around too much for hoops.
Can't recall ever having a shoe fit well except the heel too wide. Odd. Those were $65 which seems about as low as any of the flagship stores go. Which is fine if I get 2 years out of them.
Under Armour had a nice smell, like someone just finished taking as shower, and they were playing James Brown. It didn't smell like they were playign James Brown, they just were playing The Godfather when I entered. The seating to try on shoes were raised and funky-comfortable. Pretty nice set-up. Unfortunately UA was also the priciest store, and the nice looking Curry's were going for nearly $200. And I'd expect a couple pairs of sweatpants to come free with the shoes for such coin.
Next in line was Nike, where not much was under $100. There were these Jordan Jumpman sneaks that went for $75 and looked nice but felt like they were made out of recycled cardboard. Lightweight but flimsy. Couldn't imagine those holding up to 2 or 3 nights a week of halfcourt hoops. Most of the rest was $150-$200 which isn't what I pay for footwear.
I probably should try the Li Ning store and maybe another Chinese brand such as Anta. I don't really care as long as they fit, look nice enough, and last close to 2 years.