Nike created a ultra-limited 2-of-2 Dunk Low for Cadillac Formula 1 Team to mark the squad's inaugural Miami Grand Prix appearance in 2026. The sneaker mirrors Cadillac's race livery with a "Stars and Stripes" black and white colorway. Only team owners Dan and Cassidy Towriss received pairs. No public release planned.
This collaboration represents peak exclusivity in sportswear partnerships. Nike didn't produce these for retail hype or resale culture. The brand designed them solely as a gift to ownership, cementing a personal relationship rather than chasing volume sales. It's a flex that operates entirely outside traditional sneaker commerce.
The timing matters. Cadillac's F1 entry signals Detroit's return to global motorsport, and this Dunk Low becomes automotive history trapped in rubber and canvas. The collaboration validates what luxury brands already know. Extreme scarcity and genuine exclusivity beat manufactured hype. A two-piece run generates more cultural currency than a 10,000-unit drop ever could.
