Help a mom?

2
0
Joined
Jul 30, 2018

Attachments

  • 8FCAF50E-394C-4068-B85D-B9F63DDACEBC.png
    8FCAF50E-394C-4068-B85D-B9F63DDACEBC.png
    765.9 KB · Views: 35
  • 7A270323-27E9-446F-9C97-8C697710786B.png
    7A270323-27E9-446F-9C97-8C697710786B.png
    800.4 KB · Views: 31
  • B232888B-D901-4D03-80AE-4B23FB1D30B4.png
    B232888B-D901-4D03-80AE-4B23FB1D30B4.png
    831.9 KB · Views: 32
  • BEC4E734-3CA5-4CC7-9210-AEE2DAE978EA.png
    BEC4E734-3CA5-4CC7-9210-AEE2DAE978EA.png
    834.1 KB · Views: 30
I don't even know what to do with the reply to this post. Please do not go view that link for more information on the cleats - that is not a reputable retailer by any means.

The tag indicates that the particular pair of cleats is a promo sample. This usually indicates a pair of shoes that was made in some small amount in a different run than a production run. This is a pair of cleats released as a marketing effort for Nike's Super Bowl 50 collection, and my guess is that this pair ended up being sold at a Nike outlet once the marketing effort passed and they went unused. In this case, I believe the cleat had an actual retail release, at least according to a Nike News release prior to Super Bowl 50.

The short version of that is that the cleats are authentic and safe to use for athletic activity, they were likely just made at a separate point than the pair that was sold on the Nike website.

The cleats are plastic - they have a metallic paint coating on them to give them a chrome aesthetic.
 
I don't even know what to do with the reply to this post. Please do not go view that link for more information on the cleats - that is not a reputable retailer by any means.

The tag indicates that the particular pair of cleats is a promo sample. This usually indicates a pair of shoes that was made in some small amount in a different run than a production run. This is a pair of cleats released as a marketing effort for Nike's Super Bowl 50 collection, and my guess is that this pair ended up being sold at a Nike outlet once the marketing effort passed and they went unused. In this case, I believe the cleat had an actual retail release, at least according to a Nike News release prior to Super Bowl 50.

The short version of that is that the cleats are authentic and safe to use for athletic activity, they were likely just made at a separate point than the pair that was sold on the Nike website.

The cleats are plastic - they have a metallic paint coating on them to give them a chrome aesthetic.
The product details of what the cleat is made out of and performance detail was on the link I provided. I was not telling her to buy from the link just to review the info.......
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom