Nike executives ridicule their former coworker who went to Adidas, calling him a 'd-bag' on Instagram

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Nike lawsuit

Twitter/@DenisDekovic

Marc Dolce, Denis Dekovic and Mark Miner recently left Nike to work for rival Adidas.

Two Nike executives are allegedly bullying a former coworker who left to go to Adidas by calling him derogatory names like "douchebag" on social media.

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Marc Dolce, formerly a designer for Nike, began working for rival Adidas this month.

He posted a photo to Instagram yesterday of an Adidas sneaker endorsed by Kobe Bryant with the caption "#MambaDay Thanks Kobe."

In response, someone with the Instagram account @zappitello commented, "#douchebag." That comment was immediately followed by a remark from the account @hamertime that said, "Always a follower, never lead #motherfaker."

The @zappitello and @hamertime accounts allegedly belong to Brian Zappitello, vice president and general manager of Nike basketball, and Dirk-Jan van Hameren, vice president and general manager of global Nike sportswear, according to a report by the sneaker industry news site Nice Kicks.

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Nike, Zappitello, and van Hameren did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Nice Kicks publisher Matt Halfhill discovered the comments on Wednesday. At the time,the @zappitello and @hamertime accounts were public and they identified themselves as Nike employees.

"After we published the story, they both made their accounts private following a lot of backlash against them on their photos left by consumers," Halfhill told Business Insider. "I checked with other people at Nike that I know and they confirmed their identities as well."

Some of Dolce's followers also appeared to know that Zappitello and Hameren were Nike executives. One user responded: "better delete these comments boys... great look for Nike executives lol." Another wrote, "thanks for giving me another reason to stop buying Nike."

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Dolce is one of three designers who left Nike recently to work for Adidas. Nike filed a lawsuit against Dolce and the other designers last year seeking up to $10 million in damages and attempting to stop them from opening an Adidas-backed design center in Brooklyn.

All three employees reportedly had non-compete agreements preventing them from working for a competitor within a year of their employment with Nike.

Nike settled the lawsuit last year for an undisclosed amount.

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