Canadian Running

The Carbon Shoe Revolution

How the new carbon-plate shoes are changing the running game.

- By Alex Hutchinson

Going Strictly by the numbers, last fall’ s Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon was the greatest day of marathonin­g in Canadian history. The top finishers in Toronto also shared something newer: an efficiency-boosting carbonfibr­e plate embedded in the midsole of their shoes.

Strictly by the numbers – and when you’re talking about running, what else is there? – you can make a pretty good case that last fall ’s Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon was the greatest day of marathon in gin Canadian history. Kenyan stars Philemon Rono and Magdalyne MasaiRober­tson notched the fastest times ever on Canadian soil. The top Canadians, Trevor Hof bauer and Day na P idhoresky, both slashed about seven minutes off their previous bests to clinch spots on the Tokyo Olympic team. In all, an unpreceden­ted nine Canadian men broke 2:20 and five Canadian women ran under 2:37, capping what long-time running statistici­an Maurice Wilson calls “without question, the best year ever for Canadian marathonin­g.”

Numbers don’t always tell the whole story, though. All these boundary-pushing runners have a lot in common–years of arduous t raining, a voracious appetite for suffering, muscle cells packed with mitochondr­ia – traits shared by generation after generation of marathoner­s. But the top finishers in Toronto also shared something newer: an efficiency-boosting carbon-fibre plate embedded in the midsole of their shoes.

Back in 2017, when Nike introduced the Va po rf ly, a shoe featuring a full-length, spoon-curved carbon plate, few fathomed what a game-changer t he innovat ion would prove to be. Then Vaporf ly-wearing athletes starting winning races and breaking records – including both the men’s and women’s world marat hon records – at an a stonishing r ate . Rono, Masai-Robertson, P idhoresky and Hof bauer were all wearing versions of t he Vaporf ly in Toronto. By that point Nike’s shoe had become so dominant that the biggest surprise was that some of the top finishers weren’t wearing it. Among the sub-2:20 contingent, Cam Levins and Rory Linkletter were in Hokas; Reid Coolsaet and Chris Balest rini were in New Balance – all with their own carbon plates.

In a sense, the results in Toronto marked an inf lection point. For two years, Nike’s carbon plates were at the centre of a vigorous debate about fairness and technology in sport, largely because no one else had them. But the competitio­n has arrived: nearly every major running shoe company will have a carbon-plate shoe on the market in 2020. And thanks to the near-deafening chorus of praise from early adopters – not just how fast the new breed of shoes are, but how great your legs feel even after a long run – they’re no longer aimed only at would-be Olympic marathoner­s. Shoe companies are betting big that this will be the year we all sign up for the carbon revolution.

“MOST PUNDITS FORESAW A LOSE-LOSE SCENARIO FOR NIKE: IF THE RACE FLOPPED, IT WOULD PROVE THE VAPORFLY WAS NO GOOD; IF IT SUCCEEDED, IT WOULD PROVE THE SHOE WAS CHEATING.”

The idea of sticking a rigid carbonfibr­e in sole into a running shoe might seem like a bizarre and novel idea. But like most revolution­s, this one was simmering for a long time before it blew up. As far back as the 1980s, shoe companies were playing around with the unique combinatio­n of strength and light weight offered by carbon fibre. Around 1989, Brooks launched a pair of shoes – the Fusion and the Fission – that incorporat­ed the technology .“The Brooks Fusion had a carbon-fibre plate sandwiched between the midsole and outsole that functioned as a propulsion system,” recalls Nikhil Jain, the senior manager of Brooks’ high-performanc­e line.

Other companies like Fila also produced racing shoes with carbon-fibre plates in the 1990s, but the next big leap was taken by scientists at the University of Calgary’ s famed Human Performanc­e Lab, working with Adidas. A young mechanical engineer named Darren Stefanyshy­n developed a curved plate design that, according to data later published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, improved running economy by an average of one per cent. Running economy is a measure of efficiency, meaning that you’d be able to sustain a given running speed while burning one per cent less energy – which should, in theory, translate directly to faster race times. Adidas dubbed it the ProPlate

and incorporat­ed it into some of their shoes in the early 2000s (including, according to the Adidas website, the shoe used by Ethiopian great Haile Gebrselass­ie to set a world marathon record in 2007). But the somewhat abstract concept of a marginal improvemen­t in running economy never really captured the public’s imaginatio­n, and Adidas quietly scrapped the shoe.

Then came Nike – and for their new shoe in 2017, they took a dramatical­ly different approach to getting the world’s attention. It would have been easy to put out a few press releases hyping up the Vaporf ly’s groundbrea­king features, boasting of its performanc­e in in-house testing, and listing all the gold medalists who

were already wearing it. That’s what shoe companies do pretty much every spring, and most of us instinctiv­ely tune out the hype. Instead, Nike made a risky bet: they announced that three of their star runners would attempt tor una marathon-distance exhibition race in under two hours, and that their new shoe, featuring a carbon-fibre plate, would help the runners do it.

Given that the world record at the time was nearly three minutes slower than the sub-two goal, most pundits foresaw a lose-lose scenario for Nike: if the race f lopped, it would prove the Vaporf ly was no good; if it succeeded, it would prove the shoe was cheating. As it turned out, in May 2017, the reigning Olympic champion, EliudKipc ho ge, race d to a sizzling ( but unofficial) 2:00:25 at the Breaking2 race at a Formula One track in Monza, Italy. It was close enough to sub-two that critics immediatel­y called for the shoe to be banned. But the detractors soon ran into a problem: no one could agree on what exactly the plate in the shoe was doing, much less why it should be banned.

Stefanyshy­n, in his work with the ProPlate, had suggested that the magic of the carbon-fibre plate was that it kept your big toe joint straighter during toe-off, saving energy that would otherwise be wasted in bending the joint. But the savings seemed to come at a cost, putting additional strain on the ankle joint. Nike’s Vaporf ly design team was led by a researcher named Geng Luo – who, crucially, had completed his PhD in biomechani­cs at the University of Calgary in 2012, supervised by none other than Darren Stefanyshy­n. Luo and his colleagues introduced a jauntier curve to the plate, which seemed

to reduce the extra load on the ankle. But the plate’s genealogy was clear, making it hard to argue that Nike’s shoe was somehow breaking the rules in a way that the previous plate-equipped shoes from Adidas, Fila, Brooks and others hadn’t.

And the plate, it turns out, was only part of the story. While previous marathon racing shoes have erred on the side of minimalism, the Vaporf ly sat on a chunky 31-mm-thick foam midsole made of a new material Nike dubbed ZoomX. All running-shoe midsoles, in addition to providing cushioning, function as a sort of spring. They compress when you land, and spring back as your foot takes off, giving a little jolt of free energy. The vast majority of midsoles use ethylene vinyl acetate, or eva, which typically springs back with at most about 65 per cent of the energy you put into them. Adidas’s groundbrea­king Boost midsoles, which use a thermoplas­tic elastomer called tpu, got 75.9 per cent in a 2017 University of Colorado study. The new ZoomX foam, which is made from another thermoplas­tic elastomer called polyether block amide ( peba), returned a jaunty 87 per cent.

As well as being more resilient, ZoomX is also way lighter than eva, which is why the Vaporf ly can have such a thick midsole without becoming unreasonab­ly heavy. The thick midsole allows it to store more energy with each footstrike, like having a bigger battery in your shoe, and the higher resilience gives you more of that energy back. A simple and underappre­ciated benefit of the carbon plate may be that it keeps the unusually thick and soft midsole stable, so that you don’t feel like you’re running with a pair of giant marshmallo­ws strapped to your feet. The overall result of combining the plate and the foam is that Nike’s original Vaporf ly, according to testing at several different universiti­es, improves your running economy by a staggering four per cent on average compared to the next-best racing shoes. That seems to translate to an improvemen­t of somewhere between two and four per cent for race times – or between three and seven “free” minutes for a three-hour marathoner.

At this point, the only thing we can say for sure is that no one truly knows exactly how or why the combinatio­n of plate and foam works so well. “There’s a lot of storytelli­ng or myths around these carbon-plate shoes,” admits Spencer White, Saucony’s VP of innovation. That’s one of the reasons it has taken so long for rival companies to launch Vaporf ly competitor­s. Elite runners f rom almost every company have been racing in unreleased prototypes for several years now. For example, Des Linden won a rain-soaked Boston Marathon way back in April 2018 in an early prototype of Brooks’ Hyperion Elite; the shoe, featuring a carbon-fibre plate embedded in a thick layer of the company’s new dna zero foam, will finally come to market in Canada this fall, after two and a half years of tweaks and redesigns. The goal of the plate, according to Jain, is to stabilize the foam and “provide that snappy feel and propulsion at toe-off.”

Other companies have their own takes. In Saucony’s new Endorphin Pro shoe, White says the carbon-fibre plate plays two roles: spreading the force of your heel’s landing impact out into a new ultralight, ultraresil­ient foam made from the same type of material as Nike’s ZoomX; and rolling your foot forward while keeping the toe joint straight. In Under Armour’s hovr Machina, according to the

Ben Schoonover, the company’s director of run footwear, a carbon composite plate is designed to “make the transition off the forefoot feel snappier.” Meanwhile, New Balance’s FuelCell TC, again feat uring a carbon-f ibre plate and a new ultra-resilient foam, aims to provide a “combinatio­n of energy return and protection from eccentric loading” in runs lasting longer than an hour, according to Dave Korell, the company’s manager for performanc­e shoes in Canada.

That last point – protection from eccentric loading – may seem like an afterthoug­ht, but it could turn out to be the make-or-break feature for the whole category of shoes. Eccentric loading is the braking action of your leg muscles each time your foot hits the ground, and it inf licts muscle damage that slows you down and leaves you sore. “A lot of people who’ve raced in these shoes say, ‘I couldn’t believe I woke up the next morning and my body didn’t ache, and I could get up and go for a run again,’” White says.

That’s been a widely reported anecdotal experience of running in this type of shoe – and it’s even backed up by a small internal study that Nike researcher­s presented last summer at a biomechani­cs symposium in Kananaskis. In 14 runners at the Portland Marathon, those who were assigned to race in the Vaporf ly had lower levels of blood markers of muscle damage, by between 15 and 43 per cent, than those who wore the convention­al Zoom Pegasus 34. A second part of the study found that the runners were able to sustain faster workout paces with less cumulative fat igue over the course of a week when training in the Vaporf ly.

The idea that the new carbon shoes make running easier on your legs is a slam-dunk selling point, even for runners who don’t necessaril­y care about shaving a few minutes off their marathon t imes. But it a lso matters for a more subtle reason. The role of technology in sports has always been a topic of debate,

and it’s especially sensitive in a sport like running that prides itself on its simplicity and accessibil­ity. Shoes that cost $300 or more might seem like no big deal to cyclists, but to runners that still feels faintly obscene. If the only thing these shoes did was make you marginally faster, then it would be pretty easy to marshal support for banning t hem, much as high-tech swimsuits were banned a decade ago. But if they also make it a little easier to get outside, hit the roads and log some miles, and to bounce back the next day and do it all again – well, that’s harder to turn down.

Of course, act ually logging a lot of training miles in a shoe like the Vaporf ly, with a sticker price of $330 a nd a sof t midsole t hat , by some reports, loses its bounce after at most a few hundred kilometres, isn’t very practical for most people. The explosion of new plate-based shoes means that there are now options that aren’t simply intended to be marat hon racing shoes. New Balance’s FuelCell TC, for example, “will be a racing shoe for some, and an elite-performing training shoe for others,” Korell says. Its launch price of $260 is intended to make it more affordable – marginally! – compared to the higher-end marathon racing shoe that New Balance plans to release later in the year. Saucony’s Endorphin line also has multiple tiers to serve different needs: the Pro has a carbon-fibre plate, while the Speed has a cheaper and slightly heavier hard-plastic plate. Both, White says, have a midsole foam that’s durable enough for sustained regular training. Under Armour’s Machina, wit h a composite rat her t han carbon-f ibre plate, is also positioned as an everyday training shoe.

That ’s not to say t hat even t he fanciest high-end shoes only work for marathons. A 2018 study from resea rchers at Grand Valley St ate University pitted the Vaporf ly against high-end track spikes, and found that college athletes ran 1.9 per cent faster even at distances as short as 3,000 and 5,000 metres. At the other end of the spectrum, Oklahoma-based ultra star Camille Herron has shattered world records for 100 miles and 2 4 hours wearing the Vaporf ly. About the only thing they’re not good for, as far as we know, is handling soft or uneven surfaces like in trail and cross-country

“A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO’VE RACED IN THESE SHOES SAY, ‘I COULDN’ T BELIE VE I WOKE UP THE NE X T MORNING AND MY BODY DIDN’ T ACHE, AND I COULD GE T UP AND GO FOR A RUN AGAIN.’”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TOP Kipchoge running at the Monza race track, Italy, during Nike’s Breaking2, wearing the original Nike carbon plate 4% shoe
TOP Kipchoge running at the Monza race track, Italy, during Nike’s Breaking2, wearing the original Nike carbon plate 4% shoe
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? OPPOSITE AND ABOVE Current carbon shoes available to the public
OPPOSITE AND ABOVE Current carbon shoes available to the public
 ??  ?? FAR RIGHT From the 1992 Brooks running catalogue
FAR RIGHT From the 1992 Brooks running catalogue
 ??  ?? RIGHT A Brooks ad from 1991 explaining the plate technology
RIGHT A Brooks ad from 1991 explaining the plate technology
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? LEF T Trevor Hofbauer on course at the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon wearing the Nike ZoomX Vaporfly NEXT%
LEF T Trevor Hofbauer on course at the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon wearing the Nike ZoomX Vaporfly NEXT%
 ??  ?? ABOVE Nike research and developmen­t for the 4% and
Sub 2 attempt
ABOVE Nike research and developmen­t for the 4% and Sub 2 attempt
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? OPPOSITE Desiree Linden on her way to the win at the 2018 Boston Marathon, wearing a Brooks prototype carbon shoe
OPPOSITE Desiree Linden on her way to the win at the 2018 Boston Marathon, wearing a Brooks prototype carbon shoe
 ??  ?? LEF T AND BELOW Krista DuChene racing in a prototype Saucony carbon shoe at the 2019 Ottawa Marathon
LEF T AND BELOW Krista DuChene racing in a prototype Saucony carbon shoe at the 2019 Ottawa Marathon

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