Vanessa Bryant seeking information over leaked Mambacita shoes

Vanessa Bryant blasts Nike after Mambacita sneakers SHE designed in honor of late daughter Gigi were made WITHOUT her permission

  • Vanessa, 39, who is the wife of late NBA star Kobe Bryant, vented her outrage at Nike on Instagram, hitting out at the brand after shoe photos appeared online 
  • She shared an image of the sneaker design that appears to have been shared on social media and revealed that the shoes were never meant to be made 
  • Kobe, who died in a 2020 helicopter crash that also claimed the life of his daughter Gianna, had a years-long contract with Nike that expired in April 
  • Vanessa explained in her Instagram Stories post that she chose not to re-sign the deal with the brand after Kobe passed away 
  • Prior to the contract’s expiration, she said she had discussed a Mambacita sneaker design with the brand, but never authorized its production or sale 
  • Despite this, the exact design she worked appears to have been made and it seems as though the sneakers have been distributed to a handful of retailers 

Vanessa Bryant has publicly slammed Nike after images of sneakers that she designed in honor of her late daughter Gianna were leaked online without her permission – even though she never gave the brand authorization to produce them. 

The 39-year-old, who is the wife of late NBA star Kobe Bryant, shared a statement on her Instagram Stories on Thursday morning, when she hit out at Nike over the apparent leak of the shoe design, which she originally created to benefit the Mamba & Mambacita Foundation, a charity set up in honor of her late husband and daughter who died in a 2020 helicopter crash.   

Vanessa shared an image of the sneakers being held up by an unknown person, while revealing that the shoes appear to have been produced without her authorization – and released after Kobe’s years-long contract with Nike expired. 

She explained that the design of the shoe had been discussed with Nike, but ultimately Vanessa decided not to go ahead with the collaboration – nor did she agree to re-sign her late husband’s deal with the brand.  

‘This is a shoe I worked on in honor of my daughter, Gianna,’ she wrote. ‘It was going to be called the Mambacita shoe as an exclusive black and white colorway on her daddy’s shoes.’ 

Outrage: Vanessa Bryant has publicly hit out at Nike after images of a sneaker she designed in honor of her late daughter Gigi were leaked online without her permission  

The 39-year-old said she discussed the design with Nike, but never authorized production – adding that her late husband Kobe Bryant’s deal with the brand was never re-signed 

Vanessa added that she personally chose all of the different elements of the design, from the number 2 featured on them – the same number that her daughter wore on her basketball uniform – and the names Gigi and Kobe on the back.  

‘I picked the colors in honor of her [basketball] uniform, the number 2 she wore just like her uniform, the inside pattern, Kobe and Gigi on the back in gold instead of Kobe’s signature, the inside shoe details (butterfly, wings, halo), etc,’ she continued.  

According to Vanessa, Nike never had her authorization to put the sneakers into production, with the mother-of-four claiming that she chose not to move ahead with the collaboration after discussing the initial design with the brand. 

She also made the decision not to re-sign her late husband’s years-long contract with Nike, through which he released a popular line of sneakers, which expired in April – more than one year after Kobe and 13-year-old Gianna died in a helicopter crash. 

‘The MAMBACITA shoes are NOT approved for sale,’ Vanessa wrote. ‘I wanted it to be sold in honor of my daughter with ALL of the proceeds benefitting our @mambamambacitasports foundation but I did not re-sign the Nike contract and decided not to sell these shoes. (The MAMBACITA shoes were not approved to be made in the first place). 

‘Nike has NOT sent any of these pairs to me and my girls. I do not know how someone else has their hands on the shoes I designed in honor of my daughter, Gigi and we don’t. I hope these shoes do not get sold. @nike.’ 

Vanessa then shared several images of the shoes – including one photo which seems to show someone with the sneakers in their possession – while asking anyone who has information about them to come forward with details.  

‘In the 2nd photo, it appears someone already has Gigi’s MAMBACITA shoe in their possession,’ she wrote in the caption of a post. 

‘If someone can share how they have these shoes in their possession, that would be great because my daughters and I don’t have any of Gigi’s MAMBACITA shoes.’

She then reposted several screenshots from other social media users, including photos of the shoes that in ads, as well as high-res pictures that seem to have been taken in preparation for the sneakers to go on sale.  

Vanessa also questioned other people’s claims about the shoes’ distribution – posting one tweet from a user who alleged that several pairs of the sneakers had been released early by a UK-based retailer called Foot Patrol.  

‘Do your research a store in the U.K. called foot patrol released a few pairs early by accident. stay sleeping,’ the tweet read. Vanessa circled the message and added a question mark.

She also expressed upset over an image of the shoes being modeled ‘on-feet’ in what appears to be an ad for the design.


‘I don’t own a pair’: One Instagram user who posted photos of the shoes in mid-May addressed the controversy on his Stories on Thursday 

The controversy was also addressed by one Instagram user who posted photos of the shoe last month.  

‘Guys, I just want to make it clear that I don’t own a pair of those Mambacita Kobes,’ Brandon1an wrote on his Instagram Stories on Thursday.

‘The pictures I posted are official product pictures from a Nike authorized retailer.’

DailyMail.com has contacted Nike for comment.  

It has been year a year since Gianna and her father Kobe Bryant tragically died in a helicopter crash. Gianna was just 13-years-old and her father 41. 

Vanessa spoke to People this past March about moving forward less than two years after the crash in Calabasas, California that also claimed the lives of pilot Ara Zobayan, 50, Alyssa Altobelli, 14, Keri Altobelli, 46, John Altobelli, 56, Payton Chester, 13, Sarah Chester, 46, and Christina Mauser, 38.

‘This pain is unimaginable [but] you just have to get up and push forward,’ she told the outlet. ‘Lying in bed crying isn’t going to change the fact that my family will never be the same again.

‘But getting out of bed and pushing forward is going to make the day better for my girls and for me. So that’s what I do.’

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