How Controversial ‘Supershoes’ Are Reshaping Competitive Running

On the face of it, competitive distance running appears not to have changed much since the Olympic Games were revived in 1896

However, even the relative simplicity of racing from gun to tape has radically altered in recent years due to the rise of advanced running footwear known colloquially as “supershoes”.

A few years ago, the Nike Vaporfly shoe kicked off a storm of controversy in athletics.

It became a focus for claims about whether it provided some athletes with an unfair advantage over those not equipped with the shoes.

In 2019, Kenyan distance runner Eliud Kipchoge wore prototype Vaporfly shoes when he became the first athlete to run the marathon distance in under two hours as part of the Ineos 1:59 challenge in Vienna.

Ultimately, the shoes avoided a ban just in time for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Several years on, what more do we understand about these shoes and how they work? My recent paper attempts to review and answer ten key questions about supershoes as the Paris Olympics now loom on the horizon.

First, we need to understand what supershoes are and how they differ from traditional running footwear. Initially, supershoes used a sole that saw a combination of material called a polyamide block elastomer (known by its tradename Pebax) coupled with the use of a carbon fibre plate.

At the height of the controversy, much was made of this plate, leading to claims that they were essentially springs propelling runners along.

However, scientists now understand that, generally speaking, it’s the combination of all of the soles’ components working together harmoniously that’s behind the shoes’ success.

This broad effect has helped topple a raft of world records in the marathon and half-marathon distances. The shoes have improved times by roughly 1.4-2.8 percent or 0.6-2.2 percent in the men’s and women’s marathon events respectively over the last seven to eight years.

Today, other brands such as Adidas and Saucony have their own designs and use different components in different ways. But the harmonious principle in the sole design is inherently the same.

Teeter-totter effect

Beyond the observation that all components are working in unison, a more detailed explanation of how the shoes work remains elusive because so many different influences can contribute to athletic performance.

Among factors credited with the shoes’ enhanced performance are the thickness of the midsole and what’s been termed the “teeter-totter” effect, an upwards reaction force that passively enhances the propulsive stance of the runner. There’s also evidence against both of these ideas.

However, there is now strong evidence that supershoes reduce a runners’ oxygen consumption when compared to traditional running shoes. However, the scientific community isn’t in agreement as to how that is achieved.

Most studies focus on well-trained runners so it’s plausible that a recreational runner or those of a different age could see wildly different levels of performance enhancement than the elite runners we’ll see in Paris this summer.

It’s also conceivable that the placebo effect could mean that simply knowing that you are wearing an advanced shoe makes you perform better in a race, regardless of whether the shoe helps or not.

As to the shoes’ acceptability, that is ultimately decided by the sport’s stakeholders and you, the spectator. Whether they are fair or not, new technology can either prompt people to use it or provide cost barriers that reduce peoples’ participation.

Furthermore, consumers can now purchase supershoe technology themselves. Whether they really want to or are happy to do so for something that may only be effective for a few hundred miles of running before the sole materials could begin to lose their potent mechanical properties remains equally contentious.

The use of supershoes has not been unchecked or challenged. In 2020, World Athletics, the international governing body for the sport, moved to limit this technology by implementing regulations that countered what it felt was contributing to the magnitude and frequency of records being broken.

In this case, the governing body’s rules centred on limiting the sole thickness, the number and complexity of any internal rigid structures (such as the carbon fibre plates) and the prevention of shoes that were one-offs and would therefore not be accessible for the consumer to buy.

Most leading running shoe brands have now released their own supershoes. The technology will undoubtedly evolve, so perpetual vigilance will be required by the World Athletics.

Ultimately, supershoes have sometimes courted controversy, but they don’t seem to be going away and will remain an important part of distance running for the foreseeable future.

See more here sciencealert.com

Header image: Thomas Barwick / Getty Images

About the author: Bryce Dyer is Associate Professor of Sports Technology, Bournemouth University

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Comments (3)

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

    |

    Hi PSI Readers,

    Of course training methods and psychology has nothing to do with an athlete’s performance! I doubt if Bryce Dyer, the author of this article, has much experience (hence knowledge) about competitive running. But he is well aware that many people enjoy reading FICTION.

    Have a good day

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

    |

    Hi PSI Readers,

    My previous comment was based on the fact that Albert Einstein had stated: “The only source of knowledge is experience.”

    Impluse is a physic’s term which I have just learned that maybe I and others may not fully understand. My problem was from an early age I had learned to ‘pump’ myself up on a ‘swing’. And I considered the slight repetitive motions of my body, which I was causing, were repetitive impulses (adding slowly to the magnitude of the swing’s oscillation.

    And I had forgotten there were only a few of my classmates who had the experience of pumping themselves up on the swing. So they had never learned (experience) what I considered was a common activity. And I had learned in physic classes that there was this thing called impulse which increased the motion of the body upon which the impulse acted. However as I Googled impulse I first read an impulse was big (strong) force; like a golfer hitting a golf ball with a ‘driver’.

    Now I had learned that my little impulses had to made at the proper position of the swing’s oscillations. Hence, it slowly became obvious there was the physic’s principle termed ‘resonance’ involved.

    Now most of us a familiar with the air temperatures general oscillation where (when) the temperatures minimum occurs some time after sunrise and the day’s maximum temperature occurs hours after ‘high noon’ when the sun’s intensity is the greatest.

    Now, unfortunately I consider, many do not focus on the low and high temperatures of a day. They average the ‘temperature’ of each hour and than average these hourly averages for the 24 hours to get the average temperature of the day. Now I ask the question “what happens if during the nighttime the atmosphere does not cool as much as ‘Norman’ so that the low temperature of the day is higher than normal. If the sun has the same intensity as that of the previous day., the average temperature of the latter day will be greater than the previous day. This simply because the air temperature didn’t cool normally during the nighttime.

    Hopefully, you a reader see what I see (have considered). Have a good day

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

    |

    Hi PSI Readers,

    My previous comment was based on the fact that Albert Einstein had stated: “The only source of knowledge is experience.”

    Impluse is a physic’s term which I have just learned that maybe I and others may not fully understand. My problem was from an early age I had learned to ‘pump’ myself up on a ‘swing’. And I considered the slight repetitive motions of my body, which I was causing, were repetitive impulses (adding slowly to the magnitude of the swing’s oscillation.

    And I had forgotten there were only a few of my classmates who had the experience of pumping themselves up on the swing. So they had never learned (experience) what I considered was a common activity. And I had learned in physic classes that there was this thing called impulse which increased the motion of the body upon which the impulse acted. However as I Googled impulse I first read an impulse was big (strong) force; like a golfer hitting a golf ball with a ‘driver’.

    Now I had learned that my little impulses had to made at the proper position of the swing’s oscillations. Hence, it slowly became obvious there was the physic’s principle termed ‘resonance’ involved.

    Now most of us a familiar with the air temperatures general oscillation where (when) the temperatures minimum occurs some time after sunrise and the day’s maximum temperature occurs hours after ‘high noon’ when the sun’s intensity is the greatest.

    Now, unfortunately I consider, many do not focus on the low and high temperatures of a day. They average the ‘temperature’ of each hour and than average these hourly averages for the 24 hours to get the average temperature of the day. Now I ask the question “what happens if during the nighttime the atmosphere does not cool as much as ‘Norman’ so that the low temperature of the day is higher than normal. If the sun has the same intensity as that of the previous day., the average temperature of the latter day will be greater than the previous day. This simply because the air temperature didn’t cool normally during the nighttime.

    Hopefully, you a reader see what I see (have considered). Have a good day

    Reply

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