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Learn more about Brodie's Research Database & AI Assistant 📄🔍
For MORE Run Smarter Resources 🏃♂️📚
- Including Free Injury Prevention Courses 🩹🎓
- The Run Smarter Book 📖
- Access to Research Papers 📄🔍
- & Ways to Work with Brodie 🤝👟
👉 CLICK HERE! 🎉✨
In this month’s research roundup, Brodie reviews three new papers examining super shoes (advanced footwear technology) and their impact on running economy and performance.
Across a large review, a meta-analysis, and a randomized crossover trial, the consistent finding was a ~2.5–3% improvement in running economy when using carbon-plated, high-stack, high-rebound foam shoes. Importantly, benefits weren’t limited to elites. Even at slower speeds (7.5–12 km/h), recreational runners showed meaningful reductions in oxygen cost, translating to roughly a 1% improvement in marathon performance — about three minutes for a four-hour runner.
The key insight is that it’s not just the carbon plate doing the work. The performance gains appear to come from a synergy between plate stiffness, PEBA-style high-rebound foams, rocker geometry, and stack height. The shoes don’t “create” energy — they reduce energy loss, particularly around the big toe joint and during stance. Interestingly, comfort didn’t correlate with better economy, and biomechanical changes were smaller than many expected.
From a practical standpoint, super shoes offer real performance advantages, but gradual integration is essential. Altered loading patterns and increased stiffness may raise injury risk if introduced abruptly, with case reports highlighting midfoot stress reactions. Rotate them in carefully, monitor symptoms, and be aware that high-rebound foams can degrade over time, reducing their metabolic benefit.
By Brodie Sharpe4.8
134134 ratings
Learn more about Brodie's Research Database & AI Assistant 📄🔍
For MORE Run Smarter Resources 🏃♂️📚
- Including Free Injury Prevention Courses 🩹🎓
- The Run Smarter Book 📖
- Access to Research Papers 📄🔍
- & Ways to Work with Brodie 🤝👟
👉 CLICK HERE! 🎉✨
In this month’s research roundup, Brodie reviews three new papers examining super shoes (advanced footwear technology) and their impact on running economy and performance.
Across a large review, a meta-analysis, and a randomized crossover trial, the consistent finding was a ~2.5–3% improvement in running economy when using carbon-plated, high-stack, high-rebound foam shoes. Importantly, benefits weren’t limited to elites. Even at slower speeds (7.5–12 km/h), recreational runners showed meaningful reductions in oxygen cost, translating to roughly a 1% improvement in marathon performance — about three minutes for a four-hour runner.
The key insight is that it’s not just the carbon plate doing the work. The performance gains appear to come from a synergy between plate stiffness, PEBA-style high-rebound foams, rocker geometry, and stack height. The shoes don’t “create” energy — they reduce energy loss, particularly around the big toe joint and during stance. Interestingly, comfort didn’t correlate with better economy, and biomechanical changes were smaller than many expected.
From a practical standpoint, super shoes offer real performance advantages, but gradual integration is essential. Altered loading patterns and increased stiffness may raise injury risk if introduced abruptly, with case reports highlighting midfoot stress reactions. Rotate them in carefully, monitor symptoms, and be aware that high-rebound foams can degrade over time, reducing their metabolic benefit.

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