1 variation of the Jordan CJ1 T-Rexx on SoleBook.
The Jordan CJ1 T-Rexx sits among the more obscure entries in the Jumpman's extended catalog, a signature-adjacent silhouette tied to CJ McCollum rather than the mainline Air Jordan numbering system. Released as part of Jordan Brand's push to build out player-specific footwear beyond Jordan himself, the T-Rexx borrowed cues from basketball performance design while carrying a distinct, almost armored aesthetic — heavily layered overlays, exaggerated tooling, and a chunky midsole that leaned into the "beast mode" branding suggested by its name. It wasn't built as a retro-driven lifestyle shoe; it read as a modern hoops silhouette meant to hold up on court, reflecting the brand's continued willingness to experiment with non-numbered models for its stable of athletes. Compared to the flagship Air Jordan line, the CJ1 T-Rexx never carried the same cultural weight or resale attention, largely staying in rotation circles and player-edition conversations rather than becoming a retail phenomenon. Colorways tended to reference McCollum's Portland ties and personal branding rather than Jordan's own mythology. Today it's regarded as a footnote for collectors tracking Jordan Brand's athlete-specific output, valued more for its niche status than for broad recognition within the sneaker mainstream.