
Nike Zoom Superfly 11 Elite Firm Ground Soccer Cleats - Breakout Pack (SU26)
Nike Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite FG: When the Game Comes Down to a Foot Race
There's a kind of player who decides games before anyone touches the ball: the one who reads the through pass a beat early, takes off, and is simply gone. If that's how you play, the Nike Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite FG is built for you. It's the top tier of Nike's speed silo, the cleat for the winger flying down the touchline and the striker peeling off the last defender's shoulder.
You don't grind these games out. You sprint them open, and you want everything under your foot pushing you forward.
Speed You Feel From the First Step
Acceleration is the whole point here, so Nike built the engine for it. An Air Zoom unit sits under the forefoot and snaps back with every stride, like a sprinter coming out of the blocks: the energy you put down comes straight back up.
Under that, ZoomX foam (the same stuff in Nike's fastest running shoes, in a soccer cleat for the first time) adds Nike's highest energy return. The feel is bouncy and alive, the kind that makes a long run feel shorter. That's what the Mercurial Superfly is for: turning a half-yard of space into a clean break.
Locked In for Firm Ground at Top Gear
These are firm-ground (FG) cleats, built for the dry natural grass under most weekend league and school games. FlyWeave Ultra is woven into the heel-to-toe zones that matter, so the cleat holds your foot still while everything else is moving fast. The Superfly is the collar version of the silo: a stretchy mid-cut collar wraps the ankle so nothing wobbles when you plant and go.
Chevron studs bite the grass so you can stop on a dime and change direction without losing the cleat. Want the same speed with a standard cut and no collar? Compare it against the lower-cut Vapor in the Nike Mercurial collection, and see the rest of the drop in the Breakout Pack.
Product Details
- Air Zoom unit in the forefoot: a springy, responsive ride that returns energy on every stride
- ZoomX foam: Nike's highest energy return, in a soccer cleat for the first time, for explosive acceleration
- FlyWeave Ultra woven from heel to toe for a tailored, locked-in fit that fuels speed
- Mid-cut Dynamic Fit collar wraps the ankle for a secure feel at full stride
- Chevron studs grip dry grass to stop on a dime and change direction
- Firm-ground (FG) outsole for dry, natural grass
- Colorway: Multi-Color / Black (Breakout Pack, SU26)
- Elite tier: Nike's top-level Mercurial Superfly build
FAQs About Nike Superfly 11 Elite FG Cleats
Does the Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite run true to size?
For most players, yes, true to size. Mercurials fit snug and close by design, which is what you want from a speed cleat, so if you like a little extra room or have a wider forefoot, going up a half size is the safer call. The mid-cut collar slips on easier than a full high-top, so sizing isn't about getting your foot through the collar.
These are firm-ground (FG) cleats. Where can I actually wear them?
On dry, natural grass, which covers most league and school matches. They are not built for turf (look for a TF shoe), for artificial grass (the AG plate), or for an indoor court (an IC shoe). FG studs wear down quickly on hard turf, so match the cleat to your surface to protect both the studs and your footing.
What's the difference between the Superfly and the Vapor on the speed line?
Same Mercurial speed silo, different cut. The Superfly is the collar version: a mid-cut Dynamic Fit collar wraps your ankle for a locked-in feel at top speed. The Vapor is the low-cut version with no collar, for players who want a barely-there fit. Both chase pure acceleration; pick the Superfly if you want the ankle wrap.
Is the Mercurial Superfly a speed cleat or a control cleat?
Pure speed. If your game is built on pace, on beating the last defender to a ball over the top and pulling away, this is your cleat. If you live on the ball instead, receiving, turning, and picking the corner, that's the Phantom control line. The Mercurial is engineered for explosive, straight-line acceleration, not for touch-first play.
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Nike Zoom Superfly 11 Elite Firm Ground Soccer Cleats - Breakout Pack (SU26)
Nike Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite FG: When the Game Comes Down to a Foot Race
There's a kind of player who decides games before anyone touches the ball: the one who reads the through pass a beat early, takes off, and is simply gone. If that's how you play, the Nike Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite FG is built for you. It's the top tier of Nike's speed silo, the cleat for the winger flying down the touchline and the striker peeling off the last defender's shoulder.
You don't grind these games out. You sprint them open, and you want everything under your foot pushing you forward.
Speed You Feel From the First Step
Acceleration is the whole point here, so Nike built the engine for it. An Air Zoom unit sits under the forefoot and snaps back with every stride, like a sprinter coming out of the blocks: the energy you put down comes straight back up.
Under that, ZoomX foam (the same stuff in Nike's fastest running shoes, in a soccer cleat for the first time) adds Nike's highest energy return. The feel is bouncy and alive, the kind that makes a long run feel shorter. That's what the Mercurial Superfly is for: turning a half-yard of space into a clean break.
Locked In for Firm Ground at Top Gear
These are firm-ground (FG) cleats, built for the dry natural grass under most weekend league and school games. FlyWeave Ultra is woven into the heel-to-toe zones that matter, so the cleat holds your foot still while everything else is moving fast. The Superfly is the collar version of the silo: a stretchy mid-cut collar wraps the ankle so nothing wobbles when you plant and go.
Chevron studs bite the grass so you can stop on a dime and change direction without losing the cleat. Want the same speed with a standard cut and no collar? Compare it against the lower-cut Vapor in the Nike Mercurial collection, and see the rest of the drop in the Breakout Pack.
Product Details
- Air Zoom unit in the forefoot: a springy, responsive ride that returns energy on every stride
- ZoomX foam: Nike's highest energy return, in a soccer cleat for the first time, for explosive acceleration
- FlyWeave Ultra woven from heel to toe for a tailored, locked-in fit that fuels speed
- Mid-cut Dynamic Fit collar wraps the ankle for a secure feel at full stride
- Chevron studs grip dry grass to stop on a dime and change direction
- Firm-ground (FG) outsole for dry, natural grass
- Colorway: Multi-Color / Black (Breakout Pack, SU26)
- Elite tier: Nike's top-level Mercurial Superfly build
FAQs About Nike Superfly 11 Elite FG Cleats
Does the Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite run true to size?
For most players, yes, true to size. Mercurials fit snug and close by design, which is what you want from a speed cleat, so if you like a little extra room or have a wider forefoot, going up a half size is the safer call. The mid-cut collar slips on easier than a full high-top, so sizing isn't about getting your foot through the collar.
These are firm-ground (FG) cleats. Where can I actually wear them?
On dry, natural grass, which covers most league and school matches. They are not built for turf (look for a TF shoe), for artificial grass (the AG plate), or for an indoor court (an IC shoe). FG studs wear down quickly on hard turf, so match the cleat to your surface to protect both the studs and your footing.
What's the difference between the Superfly and the Vapor on the speed line?
Same Mercurial speed silo, different cut. The Superfly is the collar version: a mid-cut Dynamic Fit collar wraps your ankle for a locked-in feel at top speed. The Vapor is the low-cut version with no collar, for players who want a barely-there fit. Both chase pure acceleration; pick the Superfly if you want the ankle wrap.
Is the Mercurial Superfly a speed cleat or a control cleat?
Pure speed. If your game is built on pace, on beating the last defender to a ball over the top and pulling away, this is your cleat. If you live on the ball instead, receiving, turning, and picking the corner, that's the Phantom control line. The Mercurial is engineered for explosive, straight-line acceleration, not for touch-first play.
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Description
Nike Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite FG: When the Game Comes Down to a Foot Race
There's a kind of player who decides games before anyone touches the ball: the one who reads the through pass a beat early, takes off, and is simply gone. If that's how you play, the Nike Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite FG is built for you. It's the top tier of Nike's speed silo, the cleat for the winger flying down the touchline and the striker peeling off the last defender's shoulder.
You don't grind these games out. You sprint them open, and you want everything under your foot pushing you forward.
Speed You Feel From the First Step
Acceleration is the whole point here, so Nike built the engine for it. An Air Zoom unit sits under the forefoot and snaps back with every stride, like a sprinter coming out of the blocks: the energy you put down comes straight back up.
Under that, ZoomX foam (the same stuff in Nike's fastest running shoes, in a soccer cleat for the first time) adds Nike's highest energy return. The feel is bouncy and alive, the kind that makes a long run feel shorter. That's what the Mercurial Superfly is for: turning a half-yard of space into a clean break.
Locked In for Firm Ground at Top Gear
These are firm-ground (FG) cleats, built for the dry natural grass under most weekend league and school games. FlyWeave Ultra is woven into the heel-to-toe zones that matter, so the cleat holds your foot still while everything else is moving fast. The Superfly is the collar version of the silo: a stretchy mid-cut collar wraps the ankle so nothing wobbles when you plant and go.
Chevron studs bite the grass so you can stop on a dime and change direction without losing the cleat. Want the same speed with a standard cut and no collar? Compare it against the lower-cut Vapor in the Nike Mercurial collection, and see the rest of the drop in the Breakout Pack.
Product Details
- Air Zoom unit in the forefoot: a springy, responsive ride that returns energy on every stride
- ZoomX foam: Nike's highest energy return, in a soccer cleat for the first time, for explosive acceleration
- FlyWeave Ultra woven from heel to toe for a tailored, locked-in fit that fuels speed
- Mid-cut Dynamic Fit collar wraps the ankle for a secure feel at full stride
- Chevron studs grip dry grass to stop on a dime and change direction
- Firm-ground (FG) outsole for dry, natural grass
- Colorway: Multi-Color / Black (Breakout Pack, SU26)
- Elite tier: Nike's top-level Mercurial Superfly build
FAQs About Nike Superfly 11 Elite FG Cleats
Does the Mercurial Superfly 11 Elite run true to size?
For most players, yes, true to size. Mercurials fit snug and close by design, which is what you want from a speed cleat, so if you like a little extra room or have a wider forefoot, going up a half size is the safer call. The mid-cut collar slips on easier than a full high-top, so sizing isn't about getting your foot through the collar.
These are firm-ground (FG) cleats. Where can I actually wear them?
On dry, natural grass, which covers most league and school matches. They are not built for turf (look for a TF shoe), for artificial grass (the AG plate), or for an indoor court (an IC shoe). FG studs wear down quickly on hard turf, so match the cleat to your surface to protect both the studs and your footing.
What's the difference between the Superfly and the Vapor on the speed line?
Same Mercurial speed silo, different cut. The Superfly is the collar version: a mid-cut Dynamic Fit collar wraps your ankle for a locked-in feel at top speed. The Vapor is the low-cut version with no collar, for players who want a barely-there fit. Both chase pure acceleration; pick the Superfly if you want the ankle wrap.
Is the Mercurial Superfly a speed cleat or a control cleat?
Pure speed. If your game is built on pace, on beating the last defender to a ball over the top and pulling away, this is your cleat. If you live on the ball instead, receiving, turning, and picking the corner, that's the Phantom control line. The Mercurial is engineered for explosive, straight-line acceleration, not for touch-first play.























