chang
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http://www.starbury.com<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>NEW YORK -- Want to be like Steph? Well, it won't cost you much.Stephon Marbury is now endorsing a sneaker that costs just $14.98, a pittance when compared with the often daunting prices that companies such as Nike and Reebok charge for their footwear.The "Starbury One," a sneaker designed by Steve & Barry's University Sportswear, will go on sale Thursday.The New York Knicks guard hooked up with the low-priced apparel company after Marbury's marketing representatives spoke with Steve & Barry's about other marketing opportunities. When Marbury heard about the company's sneakers, he quickly agreed to endorse them.He is expected to wear the sneakers during games next season."We got to know Stephon the man vs. Stephon the basketball player that we read about and saw on television, and we immediately saw how passionate he was about this vision," said Howard Schacter, Steve & Barry's chief partnership officer. "We also came to quickly learn he has a credibility, a street credibility."Schacter said Marbury is not being paid for endorsing the sneakers but will be compensated based on how well they sell.</div>Jeans, sweats, shoes, varsity jackets, hoodies all for $9.98.They're being made out of the same material in China that Nike, Reebok, Adidas use. He's just shaving the hundred dollar profit and selling them exlusively at Steve and Barry's.Now, I did a little bit of thinking. Nike labor on a shoe only costs $3 plus parts (tops $7; according to some sites). Where do the other $140 dollars go? Well, I'm guessing about 15-20% goes to the store ($24-28), about $.5 of each shoe probably goes to delivery, and $.15 for the box, and the rest goes to Nike CEOs ($111.80). In fact, the Nike president was given an offer to make shoes in the US at minimum wage and still rejected the deal. It would have cut into the profits of Nike "too much" (probably would have cut $10 of profit tops). Well, it's a business.I applaud Stephon Marbury for doing this. It shows that he's not like most athletes looking for huge endorsement deals (cough LeBron James and his $100 million endorsement cough) and he's trying to give back to the community.
