` wrote:
fxhjb wrote:
Aren’t the victories a super shoe? I don’t know. Nike got so many shoes out it’s hard to know other than the dragonfly’s. But I think they’re the same as the dragonfly’s.
If you’re a 3:55 miler and shoes are allowing you to take 2 seconds off your time that is huge. In an elite race that could be as much as 5 places. I get that it might be 4 seconds but is 2 seconds a lot for an elite 1500 runner - of course.
I think the Oregon guys are 3:53 milers, maybe 3:52. But the shoe has allowed them to run 3:50 indoor. Guaranteed there are former American milers on the indoor list scratching their heads wondering how two guys only a few years out of HS ran faster than they did their whole career.
No, I was talking about the ORGINAL victories. The ones from 2009. Spike tech is always "improving", which is why we don't run in shoes that were made in 1970. Now, is the difference between these "super shoes" and the previous shoes 2 seconds over a mile? No chance! Maybe a millisecond or two, at most.
Where are you getting your numbers from? You're just pulling them out of your a$$.
Exactly. Proponents of the ‘several seconds’ of benefit seem to not be grasping that (i) there can be some benefit that is meaningful but not nearly as great as they claim (eg 1s in 1500 vs 3.5s, which as we all know it a huge difference) and (ii) that 3.5s or 1% is completely absurd at the 1500. Here’s another test as to whether 3.5s might be realistic - so Shelby would have run 3:51 mid (or really 3:51 low given 1% of 3:54.99 is almost 4s) in Doha had she been in super spikes???????? Are you serious????? Shelby is great and who knows may have medaled if she wore what everybody else wore, but there is just no way she would have been 1% faster and run 3:51.