With the new year just around the corner, we鈥檝e had the chance to preview some of the models running shoe brands are rolling out in 2023. Based on the sneak peeks, the coming year promises to bring a pack of smooth-rolling shoes that combine the latest materials and designs to deliver versatile, comfortable, and speedy rides for every runner鈥檚 needs and preferences. Here are a few models that we鈥檙e most excited about training and racing in.
Speedland GS:TAM ($275)

Foot-Coddler Supreme
The first Speedlands rewrote the rules on using high-end materials and components in a shoe, with a $375 price tag to prove it. But the ride was so exceptional that the brand sold out of the initial limited run and only has a few sizes left of their second, similar model. So, while they plan to make more of the new GS:TAM version, you鈥檇 better act quickly if you want a pair, especially as they鈥檝e dropped the price a hundred dollars while upgrading the cushioning and keeping most of the features.
As in the original model, the upper鈥檚 two, two-way BOA dials make it super easy to lock down a perfect fit (although the dials are now plastic instead of Anodized aluminum). And the shoe retains the unsurpassed underfoot sensation of stepping directly onto a thick slab of a soft, bouncy PEBAX-based foam with no insole in the way. However, the Carbitex plate beneath that removable top layer is now optional and will cost you another $35 for the additional stability and snap it provides. The overall stack height also went up four millimeters in the heel and two millimeters in the forefoot (to 37-30mm), yet the weight remained essentially the same. On a quick preview run at The Running Event in early December, I found the ride comfortable, smooth, and connected, without the close-to-the-ground edge of the first Speedland, but not at all top-heavy or squishy. I didn鈥檛 want to give them back after my few strides in them and can鈥檛 wait to put long miles on a pair.
Launches in March
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When it’s time to upgrade your gear, don鈥檛 let the old stuff go to waste鈥揹onate it for a good cause and divert it from the landfill. 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 partner, Gear Fix, will repair and resell your stuff for free! Just box up your retired items, print a free shipping label, and send them off. We鈥檒l donate 100 percent of the proceeds to The Outdoorist Oath.Reebok FloatZig 1 ($130)

Retro Retooled
Remember Reebok Zigtech? Maybe not. It came out in 2010 amid a flurry of running shoe innovation and might have been ahead of its time鈥攂ut was largely dismissed as a gimmick. This year, Reebok has decided the sport is ready to embrace the tech that has been languishing in the lifestyle channel for a decade. The first shoe in 鈥淭he New Shape of Running鈥 collection will be the FloatZig 1.
The key to the FloatZig鈥檚 up-to-date performance comes from combining the zigzag midsole geometry with high-performance foam. 鈥淭here are benefits to using that shape,鈥澛 says Keith Stern, senior product manager. 鈥淵ou get mechanical cushioning鈥攃ompression and compliance鈥攆rom the shape, and energy return and cushioning from the base foam material.鈥 Indeed, Stern says that in lab tests the FloatZig delivered better cushioning and energy return than their plated FloatRide Energy X model.
I recall that the original Zigtech shoes delivered a surprisingly smooth, peppy ride, and I anticipate that responsiveness will be enhanced by the superior bounciness of Reebok鈥檚 top-of-the-line, TPE-based Floatride Energy foam. With a moderate height and drop (31mm heel, 25mm forefoot), light weight (9.4 ounces all gender), and bargain price ($130), this looks like an accessible trainer for young runners that can also hold its own against high-performance, high-mileage models.
Launches in October
Topo Cyclone 2 ($150)

Supershoe Minimized
Topo鈥檚 shoes combine minimalist design principles鈥攍ow drop, roomy forefoot鈥攚ith modern foams and geometries to create natural rides that are accessible to all. While they鈥檝e built some rugged trail shoes and higher-stack, high-mileage trainers, the best Topos, in my opinion, have been light, responsive, simple, and unobtrusive. The lightweight Cyclone 2 promises to take those characteristics to a new level.
The original Cyclone, with a bouncy zip-foam core inside a firmer EVA frame, was an improvement on the Zephyr, which had a flexible plate that sometimes got in the way. The new Cyclone takes the franchise one step simpler with a full midsole of ultra-soft, hyper-rebounding Pebax superfoam. The wide stance and low stack heights (28mm heel, 23mm forefoot) let the shoe get away without needing a plate for stability and keep it ultralight (6.9 ounces men鈥檚, 5.5 ounces women鈥檚). I鈥檓 expecting a shoe that disappears on your foot while delivering a nimble, bouncy ride with exquisite ground feel.
Launches in February
Puma Foreverrun Nitro ($150)

Smooth, Sexy Stability
Puma鈥檚 return to taking running seriously has produced a gym-bag full of flashy, bouncy, nitrogen-infused speedsters for training and racing. Now they鈥檝e turned that design eye onto a shoe designed for guidance, although you couldn鈥檛 tell that by their looks, sub-10 ounce weight, or plush, smooth-rolling ride. Stability may never have been this sexy before, nor as subtle.
Beneath the splashy upper is a dual-density nitrogen-infused midsole with a wide, firm frame surrounding a softer inner core. A semi-rigid plastic external heel wrap adds some stability, but nothing runs under the foot or tries to alter its natural path鈥攖he frame and the geometry simply keep the foot centered and supported over the moderately-high platform (36mm heel, 26mm forefoot). As a fan of both Puma鈥檚 Nitro foam and of shoes with wide-based frames (like the Saucony Tempus and Topo Specter), I鈥檓 excited to try out the Foreverrun鈥檚 ride, which promises to be comfortable and comforting on long days, recovery days, and any day I just want my shoe to hold me up a bit.
Launches in March
Brooks Catamount 2 ($170)

Agile Versatility
I鈥檓 anxious to run in the new Catamount, mostly so I can try out its unique propulsion plate. Brooks calls it the 鈥淪ky Vault鈥 and promises it will help me fly over hills as well as roll smoothly over a variety of terrains. It鈥檚 shaped like some kind of sea creature, with two tentacles extending to the back and three reaching out front, and is made of flexible, rebounding Pebax, a material often used for track spike plates. This magic plate, according to product line manager Nick Clinton, 鈥渁llows you to be more agile and precise on trails, able to jump over rocks and boulders, and have more propulsion and efficiency uphill.鈥 I want some of that.

This plate is embedded into a slab of Brooks鈥 bouncy, nitrogen-infused DNA Flash midsole foam, which, Colton says, is tuned to be softer and more flexible than in the original version (which I found quite stiff). The softer ride should deliver both more cushioning for long miles and more adaptability over rocks and rough terrain. It still looks low and resilient enough, however, to provide a stable ground feel and a fast, nimble ride. I imagine it will, like its predecessor, excel at any distance and over most any terrain, from road to technical single-track.
Launches in February
Skechers GoRun Speed Beast ($200鈥250)

Max-Height Speedster for the Rest of Us
While Skechers has created several plated models over the years, they鈥檝e yet to produce a high-stack, max-cushion marathon-racing supershoe. Their original carbon-infused plated shoe, the Speed Elite, was only 23 millimeters thick in the heel and had a firm ride more like a traditional racing flat. The Speed Freak added more cushioning, but still topped out at only 34mm. Enter the Speed Beast, which pushes the height to the legal max (40mm heel, 36mm forefoot) and incorporates Skechers鈥 new, softer, lighter and more responsive Hyper Burst Pro foam.
I鈥檓 excited about running in this shoe, however, not just because of the thick stack of TPU-based foam (that I love in the Razor 4), but also because the Speed Beast promises to be supportive as well as fast. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not built for the tip-of-the-spear marathoner,鈥 says Keith Shelton, Skechers鈥 senior director of product development. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really for the A, B corral runner.鈥 To this end, the base is wider than other comparable racers, there鈥檚 more rubber on the bottom, and the top of the midsole is molded in a supportive foot cradle. Add this to Skecher鈥檚 winglet plate that increases lateral stability as well as speeds toe-off, plus their signature rockered and radiused heel shape that smooths landings, and it sounds like a shoe in which I could put in a lot of happy training and racing miles.
Launches in March
New Balance FuelCell SuperComp Trail

Techy Trail Dancer
New Balance鈥檚 SuperComp line, which combines curved carbon plates with high-rebound foams and unique midsole geometry, already has a speedy, low, fast road racer, an elite marathon supershoe, and an ultra-cushioned, trampoline-like trainer. Come summer it will also include a light (9.5 ounces men鈥檚, 7.5 ounces women鈥檚), low (31mm heel, 21mm forefoot) trail runner. Several brands have successfully integrated carbon plates into their trail lines鈥攁nd some have tried and been not quite as successful. I鈥檓 looking forward to seeing how well the designers adapted New Balance鈥檚 tech to handle iffy terrain.
First off, says Paul Zelinski, senior product line manager, the foam beneath the plate is firmer, 鈥渟o they don鈥檛 feel super squirrelly鈥攜ou鈥檙e not mushing or flattening out.鈥 Above the plate, high-energy rebound FuelCell foam provides soft touchdowns and explosive push-offs. The plate itself is split in the forefoot to allow horizontal flexibility, but the prong under the medial side is wider to provide snap during big toe propulsion. None of these specific strategies are completely new, but given the smooth ride of other FuelCell models, I鈥檓 betting New Balance has combined them into a unique shoe that dances over the trail.
Launches in August or September