The Air Jordan 9 deserves better. It's a strong silhouette that has a great mix of the old retros and the newer looks to follow, and it also flows beautifully with several color-blocking concepts. That said, because it dropped while Michael Jordan was away from the hardcourt pursuing his dream of playing baseball, it doesn't get the proper love.
No matter, I'm here for all the AJ9 love, and the Powder Blues pay perfect homage to Jordan's North Carolina Tar Heels days. Many didn't know Nike tried to push this one, even giving it a look in a Super Bowl commercial during 1994. Still, it didn't catch on as well as it should have. However, there are still pairs available. Let's talk sneakers.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
Sneaker |
Air Jordan 9 Retro 'Powder Blue' (2024) |
Colorway |
Summit White/Black/Dark Powder Blue |
Style Code |
FQ8992-101 |
Original Retro Release |
March 23, 2024 |
Original Retail |
$210 |
Current GOAT "Buy New" |
~$151 |
Premium vs. Retail |
-28% (below retail) |
The 2024 30th Anniversary release dropped at $210 on Nike SNKRS and Jordan Brand retailers, and while it sold out at retail, the resale market is wide open. GOAT has "Buy New" pairs sitting around $151, which is roughly 28% below the original retail price. StockX is in the same $150-$180 range for verified new pairs.
GOAT, StockX, Flight Club, and eBay are the safest verified options. For a true OG-spec colorway with this much heritage, getting it under retail two years post-release is a steal.
The Powder Blue is one of the original four AJ9 colorways from 1993-1994, alongside the Chicago, Olive, and Black/Charcoal pairs. The 2024 release brought it back in true OG form for the first time since the heavily criticized 2010 retro, with no #23 embroidery on the heels and the proper blue edge accenting along the cut white leather. The Summit White upper, black tongue and laces, and Dark Powder Blue midsole hits all match the 1994 spec.
It's one of the cleanest UNC tributes in the entire Jordan catalog.
The Air Jordan 9 is the first Jordan released during MJ's first retirement and the only "early" AJ silhouette he never wore in an NBA game. Tinker Hatfield designed it with a global theme — globe emblem on the heel, multi-language branding, premium nubuck and leather construction — to celebrate Jordan's worldwide influence beyond basketball. It debuted in November 1993 with the Chicago colorway, with the Powder Blue, Olive, and Charcoal pairs following in 1994.
The lack of on-court MJ wear is part of why the silhouette gets slept on, but the design itself stands as one of Hatfield's more thoughtful Jordan executions.
This is one of the easier "yes" calls in the current Jordan retro market. The 2024 Powder Blue is OG-spec, premium materials, and trading $59 below its $210 retail on GOAT. It's a heritage colorway with 30+ years of history, a clean UNC tribute, and dramatically better construction than the 2010 retro that disappointed collectors.
For patient buyers who value OG storytelling and execution over hype, this is a bargain hiding in plain sight.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!