Ben Wallace joins the 'Starbury' movement

Rollie_Fingaz

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Wallace to unveil Big Ben sneaker — just $15
Bulls center joins Knicks' Marbury in endorsing affordable athletic wear

MOUNT PROSPECT, Ill. - Stephon Marbury started it. Now, Ben Wallace is joining the cause.

Wallace is lending his name to the Starbury Movement, endorsing an affordable line of sneakers and apparel started by the New York Knicks’ star. Wallace will begin wearing the Starbury II basketball shoe Thursday when the Chicago Bulls play his former team, the Detroit Pistons. And his own sneaker — Big Ben — is expected to hit the market in late August or the fall.

“Kids don’t really understand what it takes to go out and buy a pair of $300 pair of shoes,” Wallace said at a news conference on Tuesday. “We don’t understand the pressure we put on our parents when we’re growing up. This is one of the things where I think the parents will appreciate it a lot more than the kids right now because it eliminates so much stress from the parents. All parents want to see their kids have nice things.”
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Launched a year ago, the Starbury line is expanding from 50 products to 200 — nearly all available for $14.98 or less at Steve & Barry’s University Sportswear. It includes a joggers shoe, skater shoe, casual shoe, gym shoe, woven shirts, jackets, jeans, T-shirts, shorts, hats and other accessories.

At a time when youngsters feel pressure to wear expensive brands of shoes and clothing and are even being killed for what’s on their feet, Marbury and Wallace are trying to provide an alternative.

“Once parents and their kids begin to see that other pro athletes are getting down with this, then it just makes a world of difference,” Marbury said in a phone interview. “It’s not just one person doing it. Other people are wearing the shoes. Other people are putting their feet inside of shoes that they’re saying are cheap.”

Marbury and Wallace are not paid to endorse the products. Instead, they earn royalties on sales.

Marbury and representatives from Steve & Barry’s started developing the line after discussing it over dinner about a year-and-a-half ago, while Wallace joined in about four months ago.

Marbury said adding the four-time defensive player of the year “gives the brand some credibility,” and he plans to get more players involved. He hopes that, in turn, will help spread the word to children and their parents — that there are good, cheaper alternatives. Alternatives he wishes were available when he was younger.

Growing up on Coney Island in Brooklyn, Marbury couldn’t afford the top brands. So he wore “everything. No specific shoe.”

For Wallace, it was a steady flow of hand-me-downs.

The 10th of 11 children and the youngest of eight boys, he grew up poor in White Hall, Ala. He knows he had shoes, but which brands? He couldn’t say.

But with the Starbury line and the Big Ben sneaker coming out, there are more opportunities.

Although the shoes are inexpensive, Marbury and Wallace said they’re as durable as the more expensive brands.

“If you were to cut this in half, there’s absolutely no difference between this and the most expensive sneakers on the market,” Steve & Barry’s spokesman Howard Schacter said, holding a red, white and blue Starbury II. “This provides arch support, a reinforced heal. It really is the same deal, and what Ben and Steph are wearing on court is exactly the same shoe.”

Marbury said: “It’s not that they’re cheap; they’re just affordable. Now, as we begin to sign more players, kids won’t feel that burden.

Wallace acknowledged he had doubts, but they went away once he tried a few pairs.

“They last just as long as any other pair,” he said. “I hope people do realize that regardless of how much you do pay for a pair of sneakers, eventually they are going to wear (out) somewhere.”


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He's supposed to be signing autographs at a local mall in Jersey today (Menlo Park) at 6 PM I'll see if I can get some pics.
 
Just got back.

Of course they picked the mall in the 'burbs...so there was a LOT of security.

The rules were:
1.) NO pictures (even though I did anyway.:rolleyes:)
2.) You could only get 'Starbury' stuff autographed
3.) only one autograph/person

Dude was early..took me about 20 minute to get my shoe signed.

But the real reason I posted is this: The sneakers looked tight. WAY better than Marbury's shoe. If you've ever bought from Steve and Barry's before, you know that everything between sizes 9-10 1/2 get bought up quick. I didn't get the ones I wanted, but I got a pair in black/white that I got signed, and a pair in all black that intend to ball/work out in.

All in all..I think they are a good buy for $15.

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This is a good look and a great idea. I'm glad Big Ben is getting down with this.

Only problem for me is that there's no Steve and Barry's in Atlanta, so with the money I'd pay for gas driving to the store in Athens, GA (where UGA Bulldogs are) I would have spent the same amount of money as if I stayed and bought some more expensive shoes, not to mention my time (Athens is about an hour drive).

Once ATL gets a Steve and Barry's, count me in!!!
 
This is a good look and a great idea. I'm glad Big Ben is getting down with this.

Only problem for me is that there's no Steve and Barry's in Atlanta, so with the money I'd pay for gas driving to the store in Athens, GA (where UGA Bulldogs are) I would have spent the same amount of money as if I stayed and bought some more expensive shoes, not to mention my time (Athens is about an hour drive).

Once ATL gets a Steve and Barry's, count me in!!!


What's fucked up is that you can't order them online. They should allow you to do that but have a maximum order or something. I was fortunate that there are two that are close by.
 
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