Product Description
Delivering comfort and street-beating durability with its tough
exterior, the Big Al analog watch is a great choice for men with an
active lifestyle and casual sensibility. The smooth black watch case
and bracelet band links are made of tough aluminum, while the dark gray
urethane-linked band provides superior durability and comfort and
offers a one-piece hinged buckle (which keeps watch on if accidentally
released). The black dial face offers green highlights and luminous
hands (with seconds hand). Other features include water resistance to
70 meters (230 feet), one-touch backlighting, scratch-resistant mineral
glass crystal, and a battery hatch on the backplate for easy battery
replacement.
About Nike
Nike
watches are built to endure extreme outdoor conditions without missing
a beat and they adhere to the company's founding mission statement: to
bring inspiration and innovation to every athlete in the world. And as
Nike co-founder Bill Bowerman would add--if you have a body, you're an
athlete. Ever since the fateful day in 1971 when University of Oregon
track coach Bowerman poured rubber into his wife's waffle iron,
technological innovation has been the spark that lights Nike's fire.
The Waffle outsole transformed the running world and soon after Nike
Air evolved Nike's revolutionary impact on sports. Beyond shoes--from
watches and eyewear to carry gear and even socks--Nike is committed to
giving athletes of every make, model and body style, who compete and
recreate in ways never before imagined, the very best performance
product. Here are just a few important dates in Nike's journey:
American record-holder Steve Prefontaine becomes the first
major track athlete to wear Nike brand shoes in 1973.
At
the 1976 Olympic Trials, Nike shoes are seen in abundance for the first
time--worn by young, rising stars in both middle- and long-distance
events.
The first athlete to win an Olympic medal wearing Nike
shoes is British runner, Steve Ovett in the 1980 Moscow Games
The
Just Do It advertising campaign began in 1988, and is now ensconced in
the Americana exhibit at the Smithsonian National Museum.