National Post (National Edition)

SNEAKER FAILURE BAD NEWS FOR NIKE

- Eben novy-williams and steven sellers

NEW YOR K • The highprofil­e failure of a Nike Inc. basketball shoe on Wednesday night was more than an epic embarrassm­ent for the athletic brand. It could be a product-liability case.

Duke University star freshman Zion Williamson — the consensus No. 1 pick in this year’s NBA draft — sprained his knee when his Nike sneaker fell apart. He tumbled to the court less than 35 seconds into the loss to in-state rival North Carolina.

The incident suggests that Nike could be liable, said Paul Edelstein, a lawyer at Edelsteins Faegenburg & Brown in New York.

He represents athletes in brain injury and other sportsrela­ted litigation.

“This would be a classic product-liability case if Mr. Williamson suffered any type of serious injury and was inclined to bring one,” Edelstein said. “This product was specifical­ly designed to provide support for athletes such as him and clearly failed.”

The injury happened after Williamson planted his foot to change direction.

His left shoe, Nike’s PG 2.5 PE, came apart, causing him to fall awkwardly.

The fallout for the world’s largest sportswear brand was immediate. Twitter lit up with jabs from fans and rival brands, making “Zion” and “Nike” trending topics within the social-media network. The company’s stock fell as much as 1.8 per cent in New York trading Thursday.

“We are obviously concerned and want to wish Zion a speedy recovery,” Nike said by email. “While this is an isolated occurrence, we are working to identify the issue.”

The question is whether the incident will hurt Nike’s prominent standing within the sport.

That’s unlikely, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Chen Grazutis.

If you combine Nike and its Jordan brand, the company has more than 90 per cent of the basketball market.

Nike reported US$4.35 billion in wholesale equiva- lent basketball sales in fiscal 2018, about 14 per cent of its overall sales.

“They might get a lot bad press over the next couple days, but I don’t think it will have a direct impact on the shoes,” Grazutis said.

Legally, though, there still could be fallout.

Although Duke officials reported that Williamson suffered only a mild knee sprain, that doesn’t necessaril­y get Nike off the hook, Edelstein said.

Unless there’s proof that the shoe was misused or damaged after it left the factory, Williamson has a good case, he said.

The situation isn’t “any different than a labourer climbing a ladder that suddenly collapsed under his weight,” Edelstein said.

Companies such as Nike and Adidas pay tens of millions of dollars for the exclusive right to outfit highprofil­e college programs like Duke, meaning their athletes are required to wear uniforms and shoes made by the team’s sponsor.

Though D u k e’s contract with Nike isn’t public, the Durham school is one of Nike’s most important basketball partners.

For comparison, the University of Kentucky, another top basketball school, extended its Nike deal a few years ago for eight years and US$30.6 million.

The malfunctio­n might also hurt Nike’s ability to sign Williamson once he decides to go pro.

College athletes can’ t sign endorsemen­t deals, but competitio­n for elite draft prospects is fierce every year. Last year’s No. 1 pick, Dean- dre Ayton, signed a deal with Puma SE that was reported to be the largest rookie deal since Kevin Durant’s sevenyear, US$60 million deal with Nike in 2007.

Williamson is one of the most highly regarded college prospects in years.

The 6-foot-7, 285-pound forward did not return to the game after the incident, and No. 8 UNC upset No. 1 Duke 88-72.

The timing could not have been worse for Nike.

Not only was the game televised nationally on ESPN, it was one of the most anticipate­d college basketball games of the year.

The cheapest resale tickets leading up to tipoff were over US$2,500, approachin­g Super Bowl levels.

Former president Barack Obama, courtside at the high-profile clash, was shown on video appearing to say with an incredulou­s look: “His shoe broke!”

It also comes as Nike draws criticism for a different kind of shoe malfunctio­n.

Some people who purchased the company’s newest basketball creation, a laceless shoe that you can control with your phone, were unable to connect to the Android version of the app.

This isn’t the first time Nike’s had problems with its basketball merchandis­e. After taking over as the official NBA uniform supplier in 2017, stars such as Lebron James had their jerseys rip.

Nike stock is up about 25 per cent in the past year, similar to the gains of Puma and Under Armour Inc. while leading the roughly 12 per cent gain of Adidas AG.

 ??  ?? A close-up view of the shoe worn by Zion Williamson of the Duke Blue Devils on Wednesday.
A close-up view of the shoe worn by Zion Williamson of the Duke Blue Devils on Wednesday.

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