Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. News

NBA commissioner says Nike’s tech will take league to a level Adidas never reached

Add as a preferred source on Google

The Nike swoosh will not be swooping in on NBA apparel until the 2017-2018 NBA season, but the league’s head honcho is already singing its praises. A year after Nike signed an eight-year deal to be the new official provider of NBA apparel, NBA commissioner Adam Silver says Nike will take the NBA to a level Adidas never did.

In his first interview with sports magazine Slam, Silver said he thinks Nike’s approach to NBA apparel will be fundamentally different than Adidas due to Silver believing that “Adidas was not endemic to basketball” and is more of a soccer company than a basketball company.  “As I said, thank you to Adidas, they’ve been wonderful partners,” Silver states. “But I think Nike is ready to take it to another level.” Adidas is the top brand in soccer; it has nearly twice as many sponsorships with National soccer clubs than Nike.

Recommended Videos

The NBA commissioner’s vote of confidence in Nike stems from getting a firsthand look at the apparel brand’s dedication to making clothing high-tech. “I was out in Beaverton (Ore.) recently and they have in essence an R&D center, where they have prototypes, where they have their equivalent of mad scientists who are noodling different approaches to uniforms: new fabrics, new styles, new fits.” Silver later states he has no doubts wearables will be involved.

Adidas became the official apparel provider of the NBA in 2006 after extending its subsidiary Reebok’s deal with the NBA and replacing Reebok with itself.In March 2015, two years before the deal was set to expire, Adidas announced it would not be pursuing an extension. A year earlier, Adidas announced plans to increase sales of its soccer apparel between 2015-2020.

Adidas’ attempts at innovating NBA apparel were not always welcomed by everyone, including the biggest NBA players in the world. “Every time I shoot, it feels like it’s just pulling right up underneath my arm,” Lebron James said to reporters following a 6-for-18 shooting performance during a Miami Heat loss to the eventual NBA champion San Antonio Spurs in 2014 while wearing the new NBA jerseys with sleeves. The following year, he took his frustrations with Adidas’ jersey designs a step further by tearing off the sleeves in the middle of a nationally televised game against the New York Knicks.

With Nike planning to provide self-lacing shoe technology and body sensors to NBA apparel, Nike’s tech will be all over the league.

Keith Nelson Jr.
Former Staff Writer, Entertainment
Keith Nelson Jr is a music/tech journalist making big pictures by connecting dots. Born and raised in Brooklyn, NY he…
This smart ring makes a blood pressure promise Apple and Oura still won’t
The $399 Signal Ring provides actual systolic and diastolic readings, but it’s launching as a wellness device without FDA clearance
Oura Ring 4, Galaxy Ring and RingConn Gen 2 in the palm of a hand

Vital Signals has unveiled a $399 smart ring that goes further than Apple and Oura currently dare. The Signal Ring displays numerical blood pressure readings without requiring an arm cuff for initial or recurring calibration.

Bloomberg reports that preorders open July 16, with shipping scheduled to begin in October. The ring can collect readings during the day and overnight, then display the results through an iOS or Android app.

Read more
HTC’s smart glasses are apparently coming to the US, but HTC hasn’t said so
Amazon briefly listed the VIVE Eagle for a September 1 launch, while HTC still says the $499 glasses are only available in Taiwan
A woman wearing the HTC Vive Eagle smart glasses

HTC’s VIVE Eagle smart glasses could finally be heading to the US. Apparently, Amazon got the memo before HTC was ready to share it.

Notebookcheck spotted six versions available for preorder at $499, each carrying a September 1 release date. Amazon has since pulled the pages, so new orders are closed and anyone who already placed one is left wondering whether it still counts.

Read more
Don’t expect smartwatches and fitness bands with replaceable batteries anytime soon
Turns out even the EU thinks your smartwatch is too small for a battery swap.
Wristwatch, Arm, Body Part

The EU has a habit of pushing tech companies to adopt meaningful changes in their product. It's the reason your iPhone finally has a USB-C port, and it's also why companies now have to offer spare parts and repair support for electronics for several years after launch. So naturally, many of us assumed wearables were next in line for mandatory swappable batteries. Turns out, the EU just went the other way.

So what did the EU announce?

Read more