When Adidas Originals dropped its collaboration with Manchester-based creator Molly-Mae Hague on April 9, the collection was gone almost before it arrived.
The range went on sale on Adidas’s website on Thursday morning and sold out online in just minutes.
As a L鈥橭real Ambassador alongside Eva Longoria and Kendal Jenner, Hague has already proven she can hold her own at the highest level of brand partnerships.
In September 2024 she added founder to her CV, launching her highly anticipated womenswear label Maebe, headquartered in South Manchester.
With record-breaking Q3 2025 revenues of 鈧6.63bn and upgraded its full-year operating profit forecast to 鈧2bn, it鈥檚 clear that Adidas as a brand is at the top of its game, and it doesn鈥檛 make partnership decisions lightly.
Previous Adidas partnerships include David Beckham, Bad Bunny and Pharrell Williams. Hague is standing shoulder to shoulder with these big names.
And it鈥檚 working – online search demand for 鈥楢didas鈥 at JD Sports rose by one and a half times on the day the release date was announced.
Over the week leading up to launch, searches for 鈥楽amba鈥 were up 35 per cent and 鈥楽uperstar鈥 up 58 per cent.
Searches combining 鈥楳olly-Mae鈥 and 鈥楢didas鈥 grew by 2,667 per cent, while searches for 鈥楳olly-Mae鈥 alone increased by 3,700 per cent.
Steve Marks, Adidas VP Brand in North Europe, framed the rationale clearly: 鈥淲e partner with individuals who define style through authenticity and a deep-rooted connection to our brand. Molly-Mae’s relationship with Adidas Originals has developed organically over time.鈥
It鈥檚 clear Adidas are signalling their intention to go after the next generation of female customers. Will we see more creator-led collections over one-off influencer promotions by consumer brands?
The proof will be in the conversions and the repeat visits – and loyalty to an established creator is likely to deliver both.
For anyone building businesses and personal brands, Hague鈥檚 trajectory is worth paying attention to.
