

The design by Tinker and future Nike Basketball design legend Eric Avar featured a cut-away area in the ankle and the same neoprene bootie found in the Huarache runner, only higher, of course. Thanks to the Huarache technology allowing for the subtraction of materials commonly found on basketball shoes for ankle support like heavy leather or Velcro straps, the Air Flight Huarache was a minimalist masterpiece. Released in 1992 during the second half of the Fab Five’s freshman season, the Air Flight Huarache was unlike any basketball shoe before it. Of all places, Tinker was inspired to create the Huarache system after a water skiing trip when he noticed how nice and snug the neoprene water skiing boots feet on his feet.

Designed by none other than legendary Nike designer Tinker Hatfield, the Air Huarache debuted the revolutionary Huarache technology, a snug fitting neoprene bootie within the shoe that conformed to the foot while also offering support. The Flight Huarache was the basketball version of the Air Huarache running shoe released a year earlier. The other, and most important to the history of the Fab Five and sneakers in general, is the Air Flight Huarache-the shoe as radical as the Fab Five’s impact on basketball. Two shoes come to mind for most sneaker heads when the Fab Five is brought up, one being the Air Force Max. Paired with the black socks were the hottest Nike shoes of the time (Michigan was sponsored by Nike). There’s plenty to say about the Fab Five and their impact on the game of basketball, but we’re here to talk about sneakers, right? Along with the Fab Five’s iconic baggy shorts, another trend they initiated was wearing black socks on court, which seems normal today, but at the time was a bit radical. This paired with their flashy style of play was too much for many older fans and some members of the alumni association to handle, but the younger crowd loved the Fab Five, and they’ve since gone down as one of the most influential teams in all of basketball’s history. Known as perhaps the greatest freshman class recruited on one team in the history of NCAA basketball, the Fab Five upset the status quo of conservative college basketball with their baggy shorts, shaved heads, and “hip-hop” mentality. If you know anything about basketball, you probably know that I speak of the Fab Five, the 1991 freshman recruits of Michigan including Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson.

The year was 1992 and a young squad of basketball players at the University of Michigan was taking the NCAA basketball world by storm.
