The Whitaker Group and adidas debut Ghost Moto Low in new Do Not Duplicate pack
The Whitaker Group and adidas turned the Ghost Moto Low into a black-and-burgundy sneaker with leather, mesh and soccer-shoe tension, backed by a wider Do Not Duplicate rollout.

The Whitaker Group and adidas sharpen the Ghost Moto Low into a black-and-burgundy sneaker with leather and mesh uppers, and the result feels cleaner than a lot of the recent flat-soled adidas plays crowding the market. The shape carries that motorsport-biking DNA the model was built on, but The Whitaker Group pushes it toward something sleeker and more football-minded, which is exactly why it lands.
That read matters because the group did not stop at one colorway. The Ghost Moto Low arrives in black and burgundy, then stretches into two more versions in mint green and silver, while the pack also folds in an F50 Sala in green and cream-white. The whole lineup sits in that streetwear-meets-sport lane The Whitaker Group knows how to work without overcooking it: low profile, quick on the eye, and just technical enough to feel current.
The pricing keeps it in the accessible premium range, with the collection set between $130 and $140. The shoes were available through A Ma Maniére and JAIDE, which is the right retail setup for a project that is being pushed less like a one-off drop and more like a platform. That is also how The Whitaker Group has framed Do Not Duplicate from the start, as a “first expression” that is meant to keep expanding through 2026.

That longer runway gives the Ghost Moto Low more weight than a normal colorway flip. Earlier in the year, adidas and The Whitaker Group introduced the Houston Rodeo Pack on March 12, 2026, with western-inflected takes on the F50 Adiframe, BW Army and Handball Spezial. That pack ran through a raffle window ending March 16 and then released in-store and online on March 20, with prices ranging from $150 to $240, including a $240 F50 Adiframe. The new Ghost Moto Low chapter feels more refined, less costume-y, and more tuned to the low-profile sneaker wave that has been pushing adidas into slimmer, sharper territory.
The Whitaker Group, the creative and retail collective behind A Ma Maniére, Social Status, APB and Prosper, has made Do Not Duplicate feel like a cultural platform with some actual point of view behind it. A silver chain tag appears on the pack’s pairs as a small but sharp marker of that message, and the styling backs it up: no noise, no gimmick, just a motorsport-derived shoe recast with enough soccer energy to make the silhouette feel newly argued for.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
Did this article answer your question?

