My 5 is in a state, has been for over 2 weeks since I last rode it 🙁
molgrips - Member
Disagree.Just cos it's on the internet, doesn't make it necessarily wrong or any more biased than anything else. Peer reviewed papers are on the internet too you know.
Not proper research.
Or are you suggesting I set up my own experiments and conduct extensive research myself, rather than read other people who've done it? Cos that's not exactly practical for me currently.
Proper research.
Nothing personal, but as someone who does proper research for living i hate to see the term devalued by people who think reading reviews of a product, or half understanding a journal article they found is research.
The more I run in my minimalist shoes the more I enjoy it and the more I enjoy running again and the fitter I get and the better I feel. To the point that I went out and ran up a hill in the pentlands is the rain and wind and mud last night just to see if I could.
The shoes are up there with the best money i've ever spent. They might not work for everyone, but they work for me and I am delighted about it.
Nothing personal, but as someone who does proper research for living i hate to see the term devalued by people who think reading reviews of a product, or half understanding a journal art they found is research.
Oh come on.. it's about context, obviously. Research means trying to find stuff out. You are clearly in a position to go into far greater depth than I am in whatever it is that you do, but if I try to find something out it's still research. It's like saying my neighbours are devaluing the term "cycling" by using it for their 20 mile spin.
I used the term "proper" because I read many opinions and sources of various types and drew conclusions based on their content and apparent quality. I'm so obviously not claiming to have done a large rigorous study.
Get over yourself, in this case.
Lifted from a Podiatry forum, seems relevant
There is nothing wrong with maximalist running shoes (ie the Hoka One One's)
There is nothing wrong with minimalist running shoesIt all comes down to two things:
1. What feeling you prefer to have under your foot
2. What injury history you have (maximalist vs minimalist encourage different gaits that load tissues different --> all depends which tissues that you need to load less)Everything else at this stage is just rhetoric and propaganda.
I run 2-3 days a week in Hoka Ones and 2-3 days a week in NB Minimus's and 2-3 days a week in various "traditional" running shoes ( and wear my MBTs to work 2 days a week!)
