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1960
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The Trackster holds a specific place in running history as the first athletic shoe produced in multiple widths, a practical engineering decision that distinguished New Balance from competitors focused primarily on aesthetics and general sizing. Released in 1960, the shoe was designed for runners who had long dealt with the compromise of ill-fitting footwear, and the width grading system it introduced reflected the brand’s early positioning around functional fit rather than fashion.
The construction followed the utilitarian priorities of the era, with a ripple sole providing grip and cushioning suited to track and road use. New Balance was still a relatively small Boston-based company at the time, better known for arch supports and corrective footwear than athletic shoes with broad market reach, and the Trackster emerged directly from that clinical, fit-obsessed background. It was sold initially to sports teams and running clubs rather than through mass retail channels, which kept it closer to its intended user than most athletic footwear of the period.
The colorway designated as OG refers to the original production configuration, which carried the modest, workmanlike palette common to performance footwear before the era when colorways became identity statements. The visual simplicity was consistent with the shoe’s priorities. There was no signature athlete attached, no major campaign surrounding it, and no cultural moment driving its release beyond a genuine gap in the running market that New Balance moved to address.
What the Trackster established was a standard for fit specificity that would define the brand for decades, making it an important reference point for understanding how New Balance developed its identity around width and function rather than endorsement and trend.
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