Best Outdoor Basketball Shoes 2026: Built for Asphalt
Best outdoor basketball shoes for 2026. Shoes built for asphalt and concrete with durable rubber, deep traction, and extra cushion for hard surfaces.
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Best outdoor basketball shoes for 2026. Shoes built for asphalt and concrete with durable rubber, deep traction, and extra cushion for hard surfaces.
143 Blog
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Scottie Pippen is the greatest example in basketball history of what it means to be exactly what your team needs. Without Pippen's #33, there is no second three-peat, no dynasty mythology, and arguably no six championships at all.
October 1, 1994: the Bulls retire #23 for the first time. Eighteen months later, Jordan faxed two words and they took it back down. The story of six championships, two three-peats, and the number that bent the gravity of basketball around itself.
Bob Love was the Chicago Bulls' first great offensive player — a jump-shooting artist who averaged 21 points a game and made three All-Star teams. But the story of why the Bulls retired his #10 has as much to do with what happened after basketball as during it.
Before Michael Jordan, before the championships, before the global phenomenon — there was Jerry Sloan. The toughest, most relentless player in Bulls history wore #4 for ten seasons and built the defensive identity that would one day win six titles.
Drazen Petrovic's #3 hangs in the Nets' rafters as a monument to the Mozart of Basketball — a Croatian pioneer who proved European players belonged in the NBA, then died at 28 just as he was becoming one of its finest.
Brian Winters gave Milwaukee eight seasons of pure shooting excellence, two All-Star appearances, and the bridge between the Kareem and Moncrief eras.
Ray Allen gave Milwaukee seven seasons of elite shooting, five All-Star appearances, and the 2001 ECF run — and Giannis wears his retired #34 today. Why both honors make sense.
Sidney Moncrief won back-to-back Defensive Player of the Year awards and averaged 20+ PPG three straight seasons. Milwaukee's greatest two-way guard belongs in basketball's conversation with the best at his position.
Bob Lanier brought Hall of Fame interior presence to Milwaukee's 1980s contending teams — eight All-Star appearances and the largest feet in NBA history.
Oscar Robertson waited his entire career for an NBA championship. He got it in Milwaukee in 1971 — orchestrating the most dominant Finals sweep in Bucks history.
Jon McGlocklin was the original Milwaukee Buck — present before Kareem, essential during the 1971 championship, and a community pillar for decades after basketball ended.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar gave Milwaukee six seasons, three MVP awards, and the franchise's only championship before departing for LA. Why #33 belongs in the rafters forever.
Lou Hudson spent 11 seasons as the Atlanta Hawks most reliable scorer — a six-time All-Star whose fluid, effortless game earned him the nickname Sweet Lou and a retired #23 that honors a decade of professional excellence.
The Human Highlight Film. A 1986 scoring title, the 1988 dunk-contest duel with Jordan, 47 points in a Game 7 loss to Bird. Why the Hawks retired Dominique Wilkins' #21.
Bob Pettit scored 50 points in Game 6 to win the 1958 NBA championship — the only title in franchise history. His #9 hangs in the rafters as proof of what one great player can accomplish on the game greatest stage.
In 2003, the Miami Heat made the rare gesture of retiring a number for a player who never wore their uniform — honoring Michael Jordan's #23 as a tribute to basketball's greatest player.
Tim Hardaway's killer crossover and relentless playmaking made Miami a playoff powerhouse in the late 1990s, earning him a permanent place in franchise history.
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