Earlier today, World Athletics (track and field鈥檚 governing body, formerly the International Association of Athletics Federations) 听on the regulation of running shoe technology. Although there had been rumors in recent weeks鈥攁ggravated by several 鈥攖hat the organization was planning on making Nike鈥檚 coveted Vaporfly Next% racing shoe illegal in elite competition, this does not appear to be the case.听
Rather, World Athletics will be prohibiting the use of shoe prototypes in competition. (This is a good idea.) The new rule states: 鈥淔rom 30 April 2020, any shoe must have been available for purchase by any athlete on the open retail market (online or in store) for a period of four months before it can be used in competition. If a shoe is not openly available to all then it will be deemed a prototype and use of it in competition will not be permitted.鈥
Additionally, World Athletics has issued an 鈥渋mmediate moratorium鈥 on any shoe that has a heel stack height of more than 40 millimeters and more than 鈥渙ne rigid embedded plate or blade (of any material).鈥
Placing a limit on sole thickness has been one of the 听on how to best regulate shoe technology going forward. The breakthrough innovation of Nike鈥檚 original Vaporfly 4% shoe, released in 2017, was that it combined a carbon fiber plate with an unusually thick (over 30 millimeters) super lightweight Pebax foam midsole. This initiated a genuine paradigm shift in the profile of racing shoes that is still in the process of playing out. Previous racing 鈥渇lats鈥 had sought to minimize the amount of cushioning to reduce weight, but the Vaporflys proved that if you can come up with a light enough foam, more cushioning leads to an increase in spring-like energy return and hence an improvement in running economy. However, that if this design development goes unchecked, racing shoes might veer towards the farcical; imagine future runners bounding along in airy platform shoes.听
Make no mistake, the new 40-millimeter limit is not arbitrary. The maximum stack height of Nike鈥檚 Vaporfly Next% is usually reported at around 36 millimeters, and therefore sneaks under the new threshold. However, the shoes that Eliud Kipchoge wore when he became the first man to run a marathon in under two hours听last year in Vienna (code name: 鈥淎lphaFly鈥) are , although Nike has not provided any data since the shoe hasn鈥檛 been released.听听
What does Kipchoge think? It wasn鈥檛 until earlier this month that the Kenyan superstar weighed in on the Vaporfly debate: 鈥淭hey are fair. I trained hard. Technology is growing and we can't deny it鈥攚e must go with technology,鈥 Kipchoge 听in reference to the (potentially banned) AlphaFlys. 鈥淚t's the person who is running, not the shoe,鈥 Kipchoge added.听
With all due respect to the fastest marathoner the world has ever seen, Kipchoge is not exactly a neutral party here; he is not going to suggest that one of the greatest triumphs of his running career is somehow illegitimate. (What鈥檚 more, this is a man who has 听hanging over his bed in training camp.)听
That said, tech is 鈥済rowing,鈥 and Kipchoge鈥檚 main point is hard to refute without sounding a little like an anti-progress reactionary. Kara Goucher, who in 2016 missed out on making her third Olympic team when she finished fourth in the听Olympic Trials behind two runners who were听wearing Vaporfly prototypes鈥 she would be in favor of banning all curved plates, regardless of material, and restricting shoe stack heights to those of 鈥渢raditional鈥 marathon flats. This seems a little aggressive, not least because it sounds like it could easily lead to torturous debates about what exactly constitutes a curved plate.听
As others have pointed out, the Vaporflys are to use a carbon fiber plate; Paul Tergat famously set a marathon world record wearing a carbon-plated shoe made by Fila, way back in 2003. On a more macro level, one could argue that improvements in running shoe technology simply reflect a natural evolution that will have a long term positive effect. After all, most athletic equipment has gotten better over time, with the net effect of improving the performances of all athletes.听
Of course, a fundamental part of running鈥檚 appeal was always that it was not about the equipment, at least for those of us who liked to romanticize it as the most elemental of sports. I鈥檒l be the first to acknowledge that the performance-enhancing quality surrounding these latest advances in shoe design might be exaggerated by excessive marketing and media coverage. But, as 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Alex Hutchinson pointed out last year, seeing Brigid Kosgei smash Paula Radcliffe鈥檚 previously untouchable marathon world record (in Next%s) last October by nearly one and half minutes (!!!) should remove all doubt that the shoes are having a major impact.
It鈥檚 all very exciting. But it鈥檚 also a little depressing that the most elemental of sports is inching its way towards a future in which you need to buy the right product to maximize your potential.
I鈥檓 still holding out hope that some tycoon running enthusiast will buy out Kipchoge鈥檚 Nike contract and offer him crazy money to race this year鈥檚 Olympic marathon in vintage Onitsuka Tigers. Because, apparently, it鈥檚 the person who is running. Not the shoe.听