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There's very little point pumping out more poorly spelt paragraphs on a shoe like this. It's the
undisputed king of sneakers. There's some office talk as to whether the III takes out the IV as the
greatest Jordan, but for that perfect balance of simplicity, Dapper Dan style pattern flossing and
premium feel and the way it captured a revolutionary moment for Nike, who's messing with this one?
We saw Eazy and Kane rocking this model, then found out we couldn't grab a pair at our small town
sports stores. By part IV, Jordan distribution was more extensive. That afforded the Jordan III near-
mythical status, as only the Londoners out there who knew the retail terrain seemed to score a pair.
We think the Jordan III in these shades might be the greatest sneaker of all time. Sat somewhere
between an easy wear and something significantly more audacious, the tumbled leather (the material of
champions) and the debut of the once-sacred elephant print altered sneaker design—actually, let's
rephrase that—the path of contemporary design, in a major way. No amount of homages, imitations or
new makeups can diminish the shoe's clout. If you missed out on 1994 or 2003's (watch the
'Sneakerheads' documentary to see the 2003 queues) retros, today's the day to pick up a fresh pair.
The pattern seems a little different, but of the Jordan reissue rollout, the III seems to have been
blessed with some good retros to date. This is no exception.
Extra points to Jordan Brand for the switch in boxes from a generic glossy one to an homage to the
original, hangtag and booklet—plus