
Nike Football introduces the Mercurial Vapor 17 and Mercurial Superfly 11 as two new boots for two different speed demands on the pitch. The Vapor 17 belongs to tight spaces, where a first touch, a cut, or a pivot can open the next play. The Superfly 11 comes into its own on open grass, where attackers build pace, stretch defenders, and stay dangerous late in the match.
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The split gives the Mercurial line a clearer performance structure. One boot speaks to the player trying to escape pressure in a crowded area; the other speaks to the attacker who finds space, stretches defenders, and keeps going over distance.
James Molyneux, Senior Director, Football Footwear Innovation, explains the idea through separation. In his view, modern football asks players to use speed in different ways, which led Nike to treat Vapor and Superfly as two distinct tools. Sam Kerr, Kylian Mbappé, Salma Paralluelo, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Vini Jr. are expected to wear the new Mercurial boots.


Vapor 17 arrives as the lightest Mercurial to date. Nike approached the boot with a sprint-spike mindset, removing weight and keeping the design focused on fast footwork. The result targets players who operate in crowded areas, where a half step, a sharp cut, or a quick change of direction can create space.
The boot uses a featherweight Atomknit upper and an ultrathin FlyLite plate. Together, those elements give the foot a direct feel under pressure. Rounded chevron studs help with start-stop traction, which matters during quick turns, sudden braking, and short accelerations.
Nike also gives the Vapor 17 a visibly light construction. Translucency, perforation, and reduced material create a boot that looks stripped back. Molyneux describes Vapor as a design obsessed with the first half step, made for players who need to get free in tight spaces.


Superfly 11 takes a different approach to speed. Nike developed the boot for attackers who build pace over longer runs and keep that threat late in matches. The boot introduces Mercurial’s most responsive speed system to date, built around a visible external Air Zoom unit under the metatarsals.
That Air Zoom unit compresses under match load and responds as the foot leaves the ground. Nike adds a newly engineered external structure to stabilize the system while keeping forefoot flex, agility, and control during braking and cutting.
The upper also changes the feel of the boot. FlyWeave Ultra gives Superfly 11 a close, contained fit. For the first time since 2014, Superfly returns to a low-cut collar, giving players a natural range at the ankle while keeping lockdown at speed.
Molyneux describes Superfly as a boot for players who turn space into danger. The visible Air Zoom system gives the shoe a clear performance feature, designed to help athletes attack again late in the match when fatigue changes the game.

Nike developed the new Mercurial boots through lab research, long-term wear testing, and in-match validation. The process studied acceleration, agility, deceleration, repeated sprints under fatigue, and late-match quickness. Nike focused on how players create, manage, and use energy over 90 minutes or longer.
Nike will release Mercurial Vapor 17 and Superfly 11 on June 1 at nike.com and select digital retailers, followed by a wider digital and physical retail launch on June 4.

















