The Air Jordan 2 released in 1986 as the follow-up to the iconic AJ1 — and became the most overlooked signature shoe in the line. Designed by Bruce Kilgore (who also designed the Air Force 1), the AJ2 broke nearly every rule Nike had established with the original.
It was the first Nike sneaker manufactured in Italy — a luxury move that pushed the retail price to $100 (significantly above the AJ1's $65). It was also the first Nike without a visible Swoosh on the upper, a decision that left the shoe without traditional Nike branding at a time when the Swoosh was Nike's most recognizable asset.
The AJ2's timing was difficult. Michael Jordan broke his foot on October 29, 1985 — just three games into the 1985-86 season — and spent most of that year sidelined. When the AJ2 released the following year, much of the cultural momentum from AJ1's banned-shoe story had faded. The shoe sold modestly, was discontinued quickly, and became a footnote in Jordan history for years.
Why interest in the AJ2 is growing:
- Recent retros (notably the 2022 "Chicago" and 2024 Union LA collaboration) have reintroduced the silhouette to new collectors
- Its Italian-made, Swoosh-less construction appeals to vintage-focused buyers
- Faux-reptile panels and clean white leather pair well with modern streetwear
Designer Bruce Kilgore:
Before the AJ2, Kilgore designed the Nike Air Force 1 (1982). He's one of Nike's most significant footwear designers but worked on only one Jordan model — Tinker Hatfield took over with the AJ3.
Notable retros:
2004 Retro, 2010 QF (Quickstrike), "Wing It" (2010), "Just Don" (2015, Don C), Union LA (2024), "Chicago" (2022).
JustFreshKicks covers every Air Jordan 2 release — retros, collaborations, and special editions — with release dates, images, and launch links.

