Albertos Dog wrote:
AhWhatTheCheese wrote:
So I have to say that I underrated the Asics Metaracer. It feels totally fine but uninspiring when just normal running in it. But I took them out for a workout today and they do really feel good when going fast.
I did 1 mile at 5:14 in the RC Elite and then did 4 x .5 mile. First one was in the RC Elite at 2:36. Then I switched to the Metaracer and did the last three at 2:30.
The RC Elite was super bouncy but felt like too much when really going fast. I still think that the bounce and cushion would really help if your form breaks down at the end of a 5k though. It certainly feels more locked down at speed than the TC though.
The Metaracer has a really nice feel in the forefoot when going fast and forefoot striking. The shoe doesn't seem to transition that fast if you're not forefoot striking though. It tends to feel a bit awkward and uninspired then. The Metracer has a decent amount of cushion for longer races, but just doesn't really feel that good when not forefoot striking at high speeds. It probably works best as a 5k shoe because of this. It could go longer but I don't think the ride would feel that dynamic as soon as your form breaks down. I would still compare it to the Skechers Speed Elite, but it is an ounce heavier and the transition isn't as decisive. The Skechers seems to roll forward better if your form does stray from forefoot striking and feels just as great forefoot striking at high speeds (if maybe a little less soft/bouncy up front but lightning quick turning over).
Think you're right, across the board. I'm probably guilty of this as well, but when a new carbon plated racer comes out, we jump to compare it to Vaporfly and for marathon distance - but Metaracer (seemingly) was never trying to compete in that arena. I don't think it's perfect (it could use a little more stack, probably) but it's damn good!
I think I'll have to test them some more to see if they keep that dynamic forefoot feel at slower fast paces, but they certainly felt good during those 800 repeats.