220 Triathlon

RUN SHOE CHOICE

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Q Are heel-to-toe drop difference­s in shoes overrated? I’m a heel striker, what should I be looking for? Mike Critchley A In a perfect world, perhaps we’d all be comfortabl­e in shoes with a 3mm heel-to-toe drop and be able to make use of the biomechani­cal efficiency they can provide. But such a world doesn’t exist. Do you wear ‘normal’ shoes to work and did your parents get you to wear ‘sensible’ shoes when you were young? If so, the chances are you’ve become comfortabl­e with the 12mm drop that convention­al shoes provide. So for you to switch to running in shoes with less of a drop involves all sorts of risks. A quick chat with some well-establishe­d runners confirmed exactly that; they love the feel such shoes can provide but often struggle with the low ride. Some runners have no problems with low-drop shoes, others (like me) struggle. I can run in them, but only for fast-paced, short efforts.

Heel strikers, such as yourself, probably need cushioning, support and perhaps something like 8-10mm of drop. Hoka has shoes with superb cushioning that offer a lower ride (5mm) and they’re easier for many to get used to, confirming – nonscienti­fically – that we love cushioning. A recent piece of research I read concluded that either you can get on with low-drop shoes or you can’t – it sounds definitive and in the small straw poll I conducted for this answer, it’s hard to disagree. Paul Larkins

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