
- Features

- Performance

- Design

- Value

Adidas’ F50 model family has been a success ever since it’s creation as a lightweight football boot, and the early signs are that the F50 Adizero will continue that success.
For the Adizero’s release, Adidas took every part of the boot and stripped it right back to basics to create the lightest boot ever. Lightness = speed, so if you need the quickest boot around then the Adizero could well be the boot for you. The upper of the boot is in something called sprintskin, a synthetic upper said to be thinner and lighter than similar synthetic uppers used on boots such as Nike’s Mercurial Vapor model.
Removed from the previous F50′s is the ‘Tunit’ stud layout which allowed you to change the studs on the boot to suit the conditions on any given pitch. In it’s place is a fixed stud layout, which depending on your choice is either for soft or firm ground. It’s a shame to lose the flexibility that the Tunit layout gave, but in it’s quest for lightness something had to give, and this was it.
With such a lightweight upper, you may think that the boot lacks strength, so Adidas have quashed any worries about that with a series of strengthening qualities in the boot. The sole of the boot gives it core strength, whilst running through the synthetic upper are internal support bands, so the boot keeps it shape under pressure. This will ensure that when you need the boot to deliver when you strike it towards goal that you will get a clean, powerful strike.
Adidas also offer the F50 Adizero in a leather upper model – so if you like the look of the Adizero but prefer the feel that a k-leather boot gives then that is the one you need. It isn’t as light as the synthetic upper, but that’s the price you have to pay!
In terms of colourways, the F50 Adizero isn’t generally a football boot for the traditionalist. There is one black with yellow highlights colourway, but it is the bright colours which really make up the bulk of the Adizero options. The most outlandish of these is the chameleon colourway, a purple and green ‘flip’ colourway which really stands out. The other popular colourway right now is the one you see in the picture above, the light blue ‘cyan’/white with pink studs, a boot for someone who likes people to see their boots from afar! The most recent recent colourway is the white and black with radiant pink laces and tongue. Again, a boot for the people who likes to stand out!
Overall, there is no doubt that the F50 Adizero will continue the success of the F50 family. With players such as David Villa and Lionel Messi wearing them, these boots are worn at the very top of the game which shows their class. They won’t suit everyone with their outlandish colourways and non-traditional colourways, but if that isn’t an issue for you and you want to skip past defenders like they don’t exist, then the F50 Adizero is a fine choice.
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