If you whine about Nike Vaporfly 4% running shoes you are retarded. Plain and Simple.
If you whine about Nike Vaporfly 4% running shoes you are retarded. Plain and Simple.
Well I already take caffeine, so I might as well wear the 4% too.
HMArunner wrote:
Just FYI, I bought my second pair of Vaporfly 4% yesterday and plan on crushing a 2:45 in Boston!!!! Peace... :)
Congrats, you just joined the Cheater Club.
Old Schooler Schooling You wrote:
and a Beta
oh he's a beta alright.
Dril wrote:
Scorpion_runner wrote:
However, things fall apart, meaning they change, and Nike has created a shoe that not only provides energy return, but provides extra energy that goes beyond the realm of fair play.
HUH? I'm confused by the combination of terrible writing and false statements. Exhibit A: "things fall apart, meaning they change." You are trying to hard to sound smart.
Secondly this isn't true: "not only provides energy return, but provides extra energy." The 4% shoe returns 87% of energy, which is less than 100% so there's not extra energy. Instead less energy is lost relative to other shoes. Boost returns 76% and the Streak returns 66%. In fact the Boost is 15% better than the Streak, whereas the 4% is only 14% better than the Boost. According to your logic people wearing Boost shoes were bigger cheaters relative to the standard at the time than people wearing 4% shoes now. None of this matters though because Boost will soon be selling the Sub2 shoe which should come close to the 4% performance. It will also be expensive though so poor people like you will continue to cry.
You said Boost is 15% better than streak and VF is 14% better than Boost, but your math is wrong. In reality its:
87%-76% = 11% VF vs Boost
76%-66% = 10% Boost vs Streak
Typical cheater trying to gaslight us all with his lies.
Math Professer wrote:
You said Boost is 15% better than streak and VF is 14% better than Boost, but your math is wrong. In reality its:
87%-76% = 11% VF vs Boost
76%-66% = 10% Boost vs Streak
Typical cheater trying to gaslight us all with his lies.
Nails on chalk board. Congrats you got me.
Math Professer wrote:
Dril wrote:
HUH? I'm confused by the combination of terrible writing and false statements. Exhibit A: "things fall apart, meaning they change." You are trying to hard to sound smart.
Secondly this isn't true: "not only provides energy return, but provides extra energy." The 4% shoe returns 87% of energy, which is less than 100% so there's not extra energy. Instead less energy is lost relative to other shoes. Boost returns 76% and the Streak returns 66%. In fact the Boost is 15% better than the Streak, whereas the 4% is only 14% better than the Boost. According to your logic people wearing Boost shoes were bigger cheaters relative to the standard at the time than people wearing 4% shoes now. None of this matters though because Boost will soon be selling the Sub2 shoe which should come close to the 4% performance. It will also be expensive though so poor people like you will continue to cry.
You said Boost is 15% better than streak and VF is 14% better than Boost, but your math is wrong. In reality its:
87%-76% = 11% VF vs Boost
76%-66% = 10% Boost vs Streak
Typical cheater trying to gaslight us all with his lies.
Have you ever considered the conceptual difference between absolute and relative changes? I pity your students.
Old Schooler Schooling You wrote:
Points well taken. I presume also you play tennis with a wooden racket, basketball in canvas high tops, golf without a large driver, and tackle football with one of those leather helmets you can fold up and put in your pocket after the game.
Candidly, I'm surprised that you have computer access and a smart phone. I figured you for a rotary dial phone and a Beta video recorder. Now if you'll excuse me while I PR in my 4%, you've probably got an 8-track to listen to.
Points well taken. I also presume that you fully realize the examples you provided do not always welcome and accept new technologies as the fair, logical, technological advancement of the sport. There are examples of all of these types of equipment being banned by their governing bodies. So to the OPs point, there could be a point where the evolution of technology no longer applies, and you enter the realm of nonconforming unfair advantage. Examples below.
Illegal rackets:
http://www.tennis.com/gear/2010/04/big-bubba-and-other-racquet-outlaws/38779/Illegal basketball shoes:
https://www.mensfitness.com/life/gearandtech/video-these-shoes-are-banned-nba-and-theyve-been-blowing-everIllegal drivers:
https://www.livestrong.com/article/131980-list-illegal-golf-club-drivers/Illegal football helmets:
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap2000000362461/article/nfl-prohibiting-nonstandard-facemasksEven computer based competitions consider and face bans for equipment deemed an unfair advantage!
https://kotaku.com/a-modern-controller-is-splitting-the-smash-bros-melee-1789922357Exactly. Only a teacher from ITT Tech or DeVry would even consider presenting absolute differences as opposed to relative.
Write this down:
% increase (i.e. BETTER) = (B - A) / A = B/A - 1
.87/.76 -1 = .1447 = 14%
.76/.66 - 1 = .151515 = 15%
I don't teach math. I'm paid to do it for people like you. You know what they say: those who can't do, teach.
You forgot illegal golf balls.http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/golf/2006/06/13/Golf-report-a-look-at-some-of-the-illegal-equipment-that-s-out/stories/200606130159
New Kid on the Block wrote:
Old Schooler Schooling You wrote:
Points well taken. I presume also you play tennis with a wooden racket, basketball in canvas high tops, golf without a large driver, and tackle football with one of those leather helmets you can fold up and put in your pocket after the game.
Candidly, I'm surprised that you have computer access and a smart phone. I figured you for a rotary dial phone and a Beta video recorder. Now if you'll excuse me while I PR in my 4%, you've probably got an 8-track to listen to.
Points well taken. I also presume that you fully realize the examples you provided do not always welcome and accept new technologies as the fair, logical, technological advancement of the sport. There are examples of all of these types of equipment being banned by their governing bodies. So to the OPs point, there could be a point where the evolution of technology no longer applies, and you enter the realm of nonconforming unfair advantage. Examples below.
Illegal rackets:
http://www.tennis.com/gear/2010/04/big-bubba-and-other-racquet-outlaws/38779/Illegal basketball shoes:
https://www.mensfitness.com/life/gearandtech/video-these-shoes-are-banned-nba-and-theyve-been-blowing-everIllegal drivers:
https://www.livestrong.com/article/131980-list-illegal-golf-club-drivers/Illegal football helmets:
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap2000000362461/article/nfl-prohibiting-nonstandard-facemasksEven computer based competitions consider and face bans for equipment deemed an unfair advantage!
https://kotaku.com/a-modern-controller-is-splitting-the-smash-bros-melee-1789922357
You must not be very good at word problems. When someone wants "the difference" between two quantities there's no dividing involved.
You must not be good at reading because no one asked for the difference.
Dril wrote:
You must not be good at reading because no one asked for the difference.
Literally all anyone is talking about is the difference between the Vaporfly 4% and other shoes.
Math Professer wrote:
You must not be very good at word problems. When someone wants "the difference" between two quantities there's no dividing involved.
https://www.mathsisfun.com/numbers/images/subtraction.svg
dude said "better"
either way "difference" can most certainly mean relative difference
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_change_and_differenceI agree 100% with the OP. If Spira shoes are banned, then the Vaporflys should be too, or at least the runners wearing them should be disqualified. The Vaporfly is like a spring disguised as a shoe. The winners of races should be about who is the best runner, not who has the best shoes.
Sure, you can argue about that one guy who DIDN’T run faster in the Vaporfly, but that’s a sample of one. There are many more runners who did run faster in it for each who did not.
In my opinion, there should be a maximum stack height on a shoe, and nothing should be allowed to be embedded in the midsole (like a carbon fiber plate). If the stack height exceeds, say, 25mm, then the runner is automatically DQ’d.
Runsmith wrote:
In my opinion, there should be a maximum stack height on a shoe, and nothing should be allowed to be embedded in the midsole (like a carbon fiber plate). If the stack height exceeds, say, 25mm, then the runner is automatically DQ’d.
So are you going to ban Mizuno shoes as well? Wave plate technology and all that? What about the medial posting in stability and motion control shoes? There are many many running shoes that have something embedded in the midsole.
smart people use them
What "real" professer accepts Wikipedia as a reliable source? More gaslighting from the liars and the cheaters.
Spira was never officially banned. They self-claimed the title of being banned for marketing purposes because IAAF rules stated that any shoe with a spring in it was banned, but IAAF never did anything to Spira. Spira went to the rule book, said look at this rule, then used it for marketing. Then IAAF changed their rules so it says
"Athletes may compete barefoot or with footwear on one or both feet.
The purpose of shoes for competition is to give protection and
stability to the feet and a firm grip on the ground. Such shoes,
however, must not be constructed so as to give athletes any unfair
assistance or advantage.Any type of shoe used must be reasonably
available to all in the spirit of the universality of athletics.
Note (ii): Where evidence is provided to the IAAF that a type of shoe
being used in competition does not comply with the Rules or the
spirit of them, it may refer the shoe for study and if there is
non-compliance may prohibit such shoes from being used in
competition."
Cheater Shoes wrote:
I agree. Amy is too old to get a 5 minute plus PR. Cheater Shoes are changing the game. Nike wants to win at ANY cost.
Scorpion_runner wrote:
Shoe technology has advanced over the years to extraordinary heights, and up until now, there was a balance
between the advancement of shoes and runners still using their natural ability to perform. A runner purchases a
shoe that is going to support the foot and provide a certain level of cushioning, so that there is protection against the road,
and a fair amount of energy return to deal with running long distances on hard surfaces.
Now , the key word is energy return, which is supposed to be a science that returns the energy and force back to the runner. The force comes from the runner's body( effort and weight) and gravity acting on the body. It sounds fair and seems fair, and that is what running shoes have been doing and focusing on since forever. From the birth of EVA to the current Boost foam tech, the majority of shoes on the market have been fair in the practice of energy return.
However, things fall apart, meaning they change, and Nike has created a shoe that not only provides energy return, but provides extra energy that goes beyond the realm of fair play.
Lets say you hop on grass or on the street, and depending on the strength in your leg muscles, you're going to go so far up in the air. You're not going to reach an astronomical height, or leap like Bruce Banner when he is in his green skin. There is going to be a natural limit based on your natural ability.
Now, lets try that leaping thing again, but lets do it off a trampoline or mattress. Well, then, your leaping is going to be double that of your natural leaping ability. We see it all the time in gymnastics , and we see it with street tumbling teams.
It's called the spring effect, and that same effect lives in Nike's 4 % shoe, so runners who use the shoe are getting an artificial energy return that is no longer fair. There are posts all over the internet of runners PRing and dropping their times by 4-5 mins, which is unheard of, even for a runner who takes his/her training to intense levels to improve performance.
( Note: A trampoline provides energy return that is 160x greater than that of a running shoe)
Case in point, Amy Cragg. I'm a huge Cragg fan, because she is one hell of a runner. However, she is 34 years old, and before running the Tokyo Marathon, her pr was 2:27. So she was a 2:27 gal. But now she is a 2:21 gal, because she ran 2:21 in the Tokyo marathon. That is a 6 min improvement for a runner who is on the tail end of her prime. That is not normal or usual, and one would suspect that the runner was doped to the gills while running the race. But Amy is not a drug doper, and has never been suspected of drug doping, so where did the artificial help come from? The shoes, it came from the shoes. She wore the Nike 4%, and produced a time that no one expected her to produce. Basically, she did dope. She shoe doped.
If you wear those shoes during a race, you are shoe doping, too. Energy return is one thing, but to cheat the field and time is another.
I often wonder Why is it necessary to quote the whole post