Travis Scott Brings Back Nike’s Total 90 Era For The World Cup

Travis Scott Brings Back Nike’s Total 90 Era For The World Cup

Travis Scott is reaching into football history for his latest Nike collaboration, reviving the Total 90 era just in time for the 2026 World Cup. The Cactus Jack x Nike Total 90 collection takes one of Nike Football’s most iconic early‑2000s franchises and filters it through Scott’s signature aesthetic, turning old‑school pitch graphics into new‑school streetwear. Released via his online store on June 11, the drop also signals how deeply Nike wants this World Cup to live in fashion as much as in sport.

The collection covers ten national teams—Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Croatia, England, France, the Netherlands, Portugal, South Korea and the United States—regardless of whether they’re Nike‑sponsored sides right now. For each country, Cactus Jack and Nike created a set of five pieces: a retro jersey, anthem jacket, hoodie, T‑shirt and distressed cap, all built on Total 90’s bold circular graphics, numbers and early‑2000s performance codes. National colors, flags and country‑specific artwork sit alongside Cactus Jack branding, woven collaboration labels and Nike Football shield patches, making the gear feel like both fanwear and capsule collection. You can see a breakdown of the full Cactus Jack x Nike Total 90 release here.

Part of the appeal is nostalgia. Total 90 was the line that defined a certain era of boots and kits, and Nike has been slowly re‑surfacing its design language over the past few years through archival references and special releases. Scott’s project accelerates that return: teaser imagery and campaign visuals show him in a brown Cactus Jack Total 90 shirt and a bright green Nike Phantom 6 Low, tying the apparel to current Nike boots and to their “Rip the Script” World Cup campaign. For older fans, it’s a throwback; for younger ones, it’s their first real encounter with a design language that once dominated pitches across Europe and beyond.

@vivekxrama

travis scott x nike just dropped a world cup collab that ships in 10-12 weeks the collection covers 10 countries and jerseys stay live until each team gets eliminated. the kits are built on the total 90 line, nike’s most iconic soccer era from the 2000s wild detail: nike actually let the t90 trademark lapse in 2019. a youth soccer coach in new orleans registered it and has been suing them ever since. based on this drop coming out, i don’t think it’s going well for him 😭 thoughts on the kits? 🤔⚽️ // follow for more

♬ original sound - Vivek Rama

So far, the collaboration is focused on apparel rather than boots. Nike news outlets and sneaker blogs note that, as of mid‑June, no official Total 90 footwear has been announced, even though fans are speculating about whether a reworked T90 model will eventually drop. Instead, the push is around jerseys and jackets priced between roughly $52 and $168, positioning the drop as high‑impact fan fashion rather than performance gear. You can read more about the release details, countries covered and price points here.

For Nike and Travis Scott, the Total 90 project does a few things at once. It deepens Scott’s relationship with the brand beyond lifestyle sneakers into full football‑inspired collections, plants the Cactus Jack logo on some of the biggest national teams at a home World Cup, and taps into a wave of football nostalgia currently running through fashion and sneaker culture. For fans and collectors, it turns World Cup jerseys and jackets into limited‑release streetwear pieces—reminding everyone that for this tournament, the battle for style off the pitch might be almost as fierce as the one on it.

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