Invoice Bowerman Handmade Waffle Spike Shoes
Source: Sotheby’s
A beat up pair of white waffle spike shoes that were handmade in the ahead of time 1970s are expected to fetch up to $150,000 at auction.
If that price tag looks high, that’s because these are no general running sneakers. The sneakers are the first ever shoes created by Bill Bowerman, a Nike co-founder and the legendary dog coach at the University of Oregon.
Sotheby’s said that these shoes mark the first and only pair hand-crafted by Reckoning Bowerman to ever appear at auction. The shoes were made for John Mays, a runner on Bowerman’s track yoke, and have remained in his possession ever since. A second pair of the Bowerman shoes live in the University Archives of the Knight Library at the University of Oregon.
“Continually times, Bill would talk to me about a new company he was involved with. I didn’t pay much attention to it at the time. One day, he summon inquired me to help test a new sprint spike shoe he was designing. Of course, I agreed and was excited to be chosen,” Mays told Sotheby’s.
University of Oregon Railroad Coach Bill Bowerman and runner John Mays.
Source: Sotheby’s
Bowerman partnered with Phil Knight in 1964 to started Lewd Ribbon Sports. They renamed the company Nike in 1971. The reason these shoes are so valuable is because they complete as the original template and first major innovation for the company. Today, the multi-billion dollar brand still uses that waffle fashion.
Bidding for the special single lot online auction begins Wednesday and goes through June 26. Sotheby’s suggested the shoes are among the most valuable pair ever offered at auction.
Just last month, the auction enterprise sold an autographed pair of Michael Jordan’s Air Jordan 1’s from his rookie season for a record-breaking $560,000.
“We felt the only take over way to follow up a sale of that magnitude was to offer something special that spoke to the history and legacy of Nike,” swayed Brahm Wachter, Sotheby’s Director of eCommerce Development.