Jordan 14

1 variation of the Jordan Jordan 14 on SoleBook.

The Air Jordan 14 dropped in 1998, the last signature shoe Michael Jordan actually laced up during his original run with the Chicago Bulls, worn most famously through that final championship season. Designed under Tinker Hatfield's direction, the silhouette pulled inspiration from Jordan's Ferrari 550, with a rear side panel meant to evoke the sports car's fender vents and a speed-oriented profile that felt sleeker than the bulkier Jordans preceding it. A carbon fiber plate in the midsole was a genuine technical addition, aimed at torsional support, while the design leaned into a more refined, low-slung look compared to the 13. Retail at launch sat in the range typical for the line at the time, and the shoe quietly built its reputation less through hype and more through association with Jordan's final Bulls title run. Retros began surfacing in the 2000s and have continued steadily since, with the Ferrari-themed colorway and the Black Toe scheme becoming reference points for collectors. The 14 is often regarded as an underrated entry in the Jordan lineage, overshadowed by flashier siblings but respected for its performance pedigree and its quiet, historic timing.