Showing posts with label barefoot running. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barefoot running. Show all posts

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Is the Barefoot Running Fad Over?



If you're at all like me, you have a lot of strongly held beliefs, but don't broadcast them too loudly...until you see the science!

So, even though I've already told you that the whole barefoot running and minimalist running thing is pretty much done, when I read the The Science of Sport guys saying the exact same thing, I knew I had to bring it up again.

Because...SCIENCE!



So check your head here, as the Science of Sport guys explain "Minimalism as a fad and inconsequential footstrikes?"

Sounds sciency, right?

Damn right.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Are "Barefoot" and Minimalist Running Shoes Done?



Humans, right? We love the latest thing. We can't wait to jump in on the new fads. Of course, that means we're ready to jump off just as fast. And so it goes with minimalist running shoes...

Great new article on the state of the running shoe, and minimalist shoes in particular, in Running Times. Check it out right here.

And really, the great takeaway from the article is this: the first paragraph up there isn't really true! We don't jump in on the new fads. We aren't ready to give up are usual, familiar, boring, old running shoes. Sure, there is a small group that loves to jump on fads, but emphasize the "small." And don't forget that the running magazines need new articles every single month...and their websites need new stuff every single day. Of course they're going to emphasize the newest fad! They have to print something.

Here, let Running Times lay some truth upside your head:

"But here's a reality check: Minimalist shoes account for about 11 percent of the U.S. running-shoe market. Remove the Nike Free from consideration, and sales of the remaining minimalist models constitute about 4 percent of the U.S. market." Quote from article by Scott Douglas.

And I can tell you from experience here on the campus of OSU, there are a LOT of Nike Frees around that never, ever get run on.

Now, if we can just get Nike to stop screwing up my favorite models of trainers. I'm looking at you, Nike Pegasus!

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Five Years...Ten Posts: Part 6


Counting down ten of my favorite posts as we head to the fifth anniversary of The Two R's.

And now for the second topic that I love to bring up whenever I can: barefoot running!

Again, as regular readers know, I have some strong feelings here. Those who don't read carefully will just think I hate barefoot running, and minimalist shoes to a lesser extent. That's not true.

I think barefoot running is great...for a very small subset of runners. I think it's a disaster waiting to happen for the everyday, average runner. If you're skinny, young, and have great form, then please run barefoot all you want. If you don't fall into all of those categories, than please, put some shoes on already.

Look, here's a BRAND NEW article on the topic of barefoot running, from the New York Times.

Which should get you all primed up to read my next post on the countdown...from November 11, 2011.


CHRISTOPHER MCDOUGALL AND BAREFOOT RUNNING

So Christopher McDougall, the Born to Run guy, has a new article in the New York Times about barefoot running.

Titled, with great restraint and understatement, The Once and Future Way to Run, McDougall rambles off five pages of anecdotes and questionable facts about why barefoot running is the only way to run. Ever. Period.

Again, before you hit the "comment" button and yell at me, let me say this: I'm not against barefoot running! I am against people that say barefoot running is for everyone and is the end-all for running injuries.

I have to show a couple passages:

So how did one of our greatest strengths become such a liability? “The data suggests up to 79 percent of all runners are injured every year,” says Stephen Messier, the director of the J. B. Snow Biomechanics Laboratory at Wake Forest University. “What’s more, those figures have been consistent since the 1970s.” Messier is currently 11 months into a study for the U.S. Army and estimates that 40 percent of his 200 subjects will be hurt within a year. “It’s become a serious public health crisis.”

Oh boy. First, 79 percent? Wow. I don't buy it, but OK. Second, why does it say a couple lines down that only 40% of his subjects will be hurt? I thought we just said it was around 80%? That's a pretty big difference. And finally, running injuries = public health crisis? Somebody is looking for more grant funding.

And this beauty:

Nigg now believes mistakes were made. “Initial results were often overinterpreted and were partly responsible for a few ‘blunders’ in sport-shoe construction,” he said in a speech to the International Society of Biomechanics in 2005. The belief in the need for cushioning and pronation control, he told me, was, in retrospect, “completely wrong thinking.” His stance was seconded in June 2010, when The British Journal of Sports Medicine reported that a study of 105 women enrolled in a 13-week half-marathon training program found that every single runner who was given motion-control shoes to control excess foot pronation was injured. “You don’t need any protection at all except for cold and, like, gravel,” Nigg now says.

I'd like to see this study's methodology. First, were all 105 given the motion-control shoes? And if not, how many? And were the motion-control shoes only given to women that had problems...such as previous injuries?

The comments section is actually more interesting than the article itself, and has better information, both for and against barefoot running.

Here's the APMA's position statement on barefoot running, in case you're curious.

Look, I don't care if you run barefoot or not (I don't have a book to sell), but if you're going to proselytize barefoot running like there's no other conceivable way, please do it away from me.

Flame on!

Monday, April 2, 2012

Running and Triathlon Links Monday!


Here are some links to start your week:

17 year old Cayla Hatton runs a 33:17 10k! - Don't believe it? Check the video here

Portland's Race for the Roses Results - Check the winning female 10k time and compare it to Hatton above

Photos from the Ironman 70.3 California - Andy Potts and Melanie McQuaid are your winners

The Sports Scientists Blog looks at the lawsuit against Vibram Five Finger shoes - People getting injured running in Five Fingers? Weird...

Cooper River Bridge Run, sixth biggest run in US, has hour-long delay before start - I've never seen a race that buses people to the start line not have problems

Oregon's Jenn Shelton sponsored by Hyundai - "Born to Run" has really made her into a star

Triathlete Magazine tells you how to set up your bike like a pro in transition - They should show you how to keep your transition neighbors from knocking all your crap over...get there first, I guess

Dara Torres shows you how to swim like an Olympian - even if you're 44 years old

Coos Bay, OR runner Chuck Engle sets marathon record - he's won, not just raced, but won, 145 marathons

Photo of Cayla Hatton by Tia Ann Chapman of the Hartford Courant.

169

Monday, March 26, 2012

Running and Triathlon Links Monday!


I love this OSU promo, showing the incredible Laura Carlyle running...and selling shoes at Five Star Sports in Corvallis. Hey, that's where I buy my shoes!

Here's what happened last week:

Oregon's Shalane Flanagan wins Lisbon Half Marathon - and against a very strong field

Good photo gallery of the Lisbon Half - at Let's Run

Meb Keflezighi talking about training in Mammoth Lakes, CA - it's the new hot spot

Craig Alexander wins Ironman Asia-Pacific World Championships - Caroline Steffen takes women's title

Australia's Erin Densham wins the Mooloolaba ITU World Cup Triathlon - I just wanted to say "Mooloolaba!"

Emma Snowsill gets sick before Mooloolaba - now has only one shot to get on Aussie Olympic Triathlon team

Great article and video on OSU miler and cross country star Laura Carlyle - only been running for a couple years and is already the best OSU has ever had

How long does it take to recover from a marathon? - Good article from the New York Times; the commonly held theories may be wrong

We all get old, even Olympic swimming hero Ian Thorp and running legend Haile Gebrselassie - but not everyone handles aging, and retirement, in the same way

Fantastic article on Eugene's Lauren Fleshman and the trials of distance running and injuries - she's so open and honest; I love her

Another great Running Times article on another great Oregon runner - this one is about Ashland's Timothy Olson, a rising star in the Ultra world

Maybe barefoot running isn't the way to go - if you know my views on barefoot running, you know I've got to link to this

McKenzie River Half Marathon Results - direct from Eugene, OR

Mercer Island Rotary Half Marathon Results - up yet?


169

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Christopher McDougall and Barefoot Running


So Christopher McDougall, the Born to Run guy, has a new article in the New York Times about barefoot running.

Titled, with great restraint and understatement, The Once and Future Way to Run, McDougall rambles off five pages of anecdotes and questionable facts about why barefoot running is the only way to run. Ever. Period.

Again, before you hit the "comment" button and yell at me, let me say this: I'm not against barefoot running! I am against people that say barefoot running is for everyone and is the end-all for running injuries.

I have to show a couple passages:

So how did one of our greatest strengths become such a liability? “The data suggests up to 79 percent of all runners are injured every year,” says Stephen Messier, the director of the J. B. Snow Biomechanics Laboratory at Wake Forest University. “What’s more, those figures have been consistent since the 1970s.” Messier is currently 11 months into a study for the U.S. Army and estimates that 40 percent of his 200 subjects will be hurt within a year. “It’s become a serious public health crisis.”

Oh boy. First, 79 percent? Wow. I don't buy it, but OK. Second, why does it say a couple lines down that only 40% of his subjects will be hurt? I thought we just said it was around 80%? That's a pretty big difference. And finally, running injuries = public health crisis? Somebody is looking for more grant funding.

And this beauty:

Nigg now believes mistakes were made. “Initial results were often overinterpreted and were partly responsible for a few ‘blunders’ in sport-shoe construction,” he said in a speech to the International Society of Biomechanics in 2005. The belief in the need for cushioning and pronation control, he told me, was, in retrospect, “completely wrong thinking.” His stance was seconded in June 2010, when The British Journal of Sports Medicine reported that a study of 105 women enrolled in a 13-week half-marathon training program found that every single runner who was given motion-control shoes to control excess foot pronation was injured. “You don’t need any protection at all except for cold and, like, gravel,” Nigg now says.

I'd like to see this study's methodology. First, were all 105 given the motion-control shoes? And if not, how many? And were the motion-control shoes only given to women that had problems...such as previous injuries?

The comments section is actually more interesting than the article itself, and has better information, both for and against barefoot running.

Here's the APMA's position statement on barefoot running, in case you're curious.

Look, I don't care if you run barefoot or not (I don't have a book to sell), but if you're going to proselytize barefoot running like there's no other conceivable way, please do it away from me.

Flame on!

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Barefoot Running and Broken Feet


You should already know my stance on barefoot running, so I won't rehash too much. You can check my thoughts here and here and here and here and here and here...

Anyhoo, there was a good article in the Oregonian yesterday about barefoot running and the chance of injury. You can see in the comments under the article that barefooters were not happy with the tone of the article. Frankly, and predictably, I liked the tone of the article. Running magazines over the past two or three years have been littered with pro-barefoot and minimalist running articles - it's nice to see a writer take the other side.

Lord knows, the shoe companies are jumping on the minimalist bandwagon hard. We need a little skepticism here and there.

That's what I think anyway. What do you think?


Photo by Faith Cathcart at the Oregonian.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Yet Another Reason to Wear Real Shoes...


Notice that Sean Penn, looking pretty fit at age 50, is wearing some old-school Nike non-minimalist running shoes, while Scarlett Johansson and her tummy, at age 26, is wearing...sigh...the oh-so-trendy Five Fingers.

Go ahead and try to argue with the facts, but the photo really says it all...put on some real shoes already.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Barefoot Running Is Bad!


Hey, I didn't say it - this guy did!

Well, OK, I did say it, once or twice, but this guy actually puts some work in on convincing people that Barefoot Running is not the cure-all that some people make it out to be.

Whereas, I just like to say things like, "don't be an idiot - put some shoes on already."

Monday, January 17, 2011

Barefoot and Minimalist Running Here to Stay


Whether you want it or not.

If you're a regular reader of the R's, you already know my feelings about Barefoot Running. Cliff Notes version: it's fine for a very small subset of runners and an injury waiting to happen for most.

Unfortunately, now that the running shoe companies have figured out how to make money from barefoot running (yeah, they can't make money from barefoot running, so...hello minimalist running shoes!), you can be sure that the barefoot/minimalist trend won't be going away anytime soon.

But can't we be reasonable about this whole barefoot thing? I picked up the October 2010 issue of TrailRunner Magazine at the library and its got an article in it by someone named Michael Sandler, titled: Feel the Dirt Move Under Your Feet - How Barefoot Training Can Help You Fly.

Oh boy.

Hey, you want to run barefoot, knock yourself out. But I have to question how objective an article like this is, considering Mr. Sandler just happens to own a company called RunBare and has a book out titled: Barefoot Running: How to Run Light and Free by Getting in Touch with the Earth.

Does TrailRunner really think we're going to get a fair, balanced view of barefoot running like this? Come on.

Trust me, the shoe companies will spend plenty lying to us about how great minimalist shoes are, we don't need our few major media outlets doing the same thing.

Photo: "If the Barefooters had the R's running their advertising campaign."

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Barefoot Running Shoe Review?


I know, right? How do you have a shoe review for barefoot running? Well, this is more a minimalist shoe review. If you want to run barefoot, hey, go ahead. If you want skimpy shoes to run "almost" barefoot, head over to Runner's World and check out these informative videos.

And if you don't already know how I feel about barefoot running, well...you should.

Let's race! With shoes or not!

RACES FOR WEEK OF DECEMBER 13th TO DECEMBER 19th

December 18th / YMCA Christmas Run 6.5 mile and 2.5 mile / Boise, ID

December 18th / Frozen Trail Runfest 50k, 22 mile, 13 mile, 8 mile, 5 mile and 5k / Eugene, OR

December 18th / Santa Marathon, Half-Marathon, 10 mile, 6.2 mile and 3.1 mile and Duathlon / Rochester, WA

December 18th / Santa Runs 10k and 5k / Tacoma, WA

December 18th / Cable Bridge Run 10k and 5k / Pasco, WA

December 19th / 12k's of Christmas Holiday Run 12k and 5k / Kirkland, WA

December 19th / Winter Solstice Run 5k / Eugene, OR

And the photo? Well, you put in "barefoot running dork" and this poor guy comes up. Sorry Buddy!

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Barefoot Running In The Snow?


Put some shoes on already!

See, this...no, THIS, is why I fear the whole barefoot running thing getting out of hand. It's not so much that these idiots are running barefoot in the snow and ice, although that's bad enough on it's own, but the real problem is the article.

The fawning, "oh aren't these barefoot runners brave and bold!" for running in freezing temps with no shoes, slant of these kinds of articles is just trouble. Does anyone really think to themselves, "hey, I'll tell you what we don't have enough of in the running world, we don't have enough people running in the ice and snow in bare feet!"

Sigh...and the comments, both from the same guy I note, about how barefoot running will give you "ankles of steel."

Oy!

Has this barefoot thing run its 15 minutes yet?


Apparently, that's Mike Sadler in the photo. Don't know him - it came from Rob's Barefoot Blog over here.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

The R's Jumps Into the Barefoot Running Fray!



That's right, in the latest issue of RaceCenter magazine, the R's alter ego takes a hard look at the new fad of barefoot running. You heard me, I called it a fad. Hey, I tried to be very nonjudgmental in the article, titled "Running Barefoot Like Abebe," but I truly believe barefoot running is trouble for about 95% of the runners out there. People that never should try running without shoes: the overweight, the undertrained, the beginners, the impatient - they'll all see these articles and studies that are coming out, and they'll try it.

And it won't end well.

It's an injury waiting to happen for the average runner. Now if you're an elite runner. If you have perfect form. It you weigh a buck-ten. Yes, you may try barefoot running. Although, most of the elite runners will stick with their lightweight trainers that they've always worn anyway.

I just don't see more than a handful of runners being happy going barefoot over the long haul.

Now, go grab the new issue of RaceCenter and watch me take 1500 words to say the same thing!