More Controversy Surrounding Marathon Records

in sportstalk •  5 years ago 

Photo courtesy of Denis Barthel - His Personal Work

The world of marathoning has been flipped upside down in the past few weeks. Eliud Kipchoge proved that the 2-hour marathon barrier could be broken (Under almost perfectly ideal conditions) and Brigid Kosgei shattered Paula Radcliffe's marathon record. Additionally, Kenensia Bekele just missed the world record by 2 seconds 2 weeks ago.

In theory, this sounds like an amazing time for marathoning, and I admit I believe it is. However, this doesn’t come without a bit concern and the most obvious has been all of the issues with drug use. However, I’m not here to discuss that again. I’m here to talk about technology and how it may be making a huge difference.

Nike claims that the original Nike Vaporfly 4% provided runners with a 4% energy savings. In theory, this would allow runners to instead there running speed somewhere between 3% and 4%. Currently, the 5 fastest marathons have all been run in Vaporflys. Is this a coincidence? Honestly, I don’t think so. This isn’t to take away anything from the times that have been run. They are all amazing!

The rumblings first caught my attention when I noticed an Instagram post from Ryan Hall who is the American half-marathon record holder in 59:43 and ran 2:04:58 (not an American record due to the course)

With all due respect to kipchogeeliud as he is clearly the greatest marathoner of all-time regardless of the shoes he is in, when a shoe company puts multiple carbon fiber plates in a shoe with cushion between the plates it is no longer a shoe, it’s a spring, and a clear mechanical advantage to anyone not in those shoes. I’m just hoping iaaf_athletics makes sure the upcoming Olympics and wmmajors are fair playing fields for athletes of all brands.

Hall did go on to clarify in a later post that he believes that shoes need to be regulated to ensure it is an even playing field across all brands of shoes and that he doesn't believe that runners should be losing races because the brand of shoe they run does not have a spring like mechanism.

Additionally..

It may be soon that we see all elite marathoners wearing the same shoe

Among those who wore these shoes are the first two Americans to finish at the Chicago marathon, Jake Riley and Jarrel Mock. These athletes are unsponsored and both decided one running in Nike Vaporflys.
Jonathan Gault a writer for letsrun.com posted this on his twitter feed.

Jake Riley and Jerrell Mock, the top two American finishers in Chicago today, are both unsponsored, and hence could choose to race in any shoe. Both chose the Nike Vaporflys.

"It feels like running on trampolines," Riley said.

Honestly, at this point, I'm not sure what to think. For me, it doesn't seem like just a coincidence that the 2-hour barrier was broken and the women's world record was broken in the same type of shoe. I do believe that is offering an advantage, but I don't know how much. I also believe that there is a placebo effect for a lot of the runners at the Chicago marathon after seeing Kipchoge break 2 hours in the marathon.

I do hope that strict guidelines are implemented though. I don't want to see Nike athletes rise to the top just because of the shoe. Yes... They are amazing runners, but if the shoe does provide the advertised benefit they are absolutely not on a level playing field until either the shoes are not for use or until other brands catch up.

Sources

Ryan Hall Instagram Post
Jonathan Gault Twitter Post

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It sounds rather like golf where the equipment has to be evaluated and regulated to stop technology giving players an advantage or tennis racquets or cycling.....

I don't see any issue with regulating shoes in Athletics and there is no way these recent time advancements are pure coincidence.

Obviously it's been reported that the IAAF are investigating and there is a lot of press about this topic today.

I would say that these shoes are on general sale I believe so there is nothing to stop any athlete buying a pair which will surely happen if they think there is an advantage to using them.

I guess we will just have to see what happens.

For sure. The biggest issue I see is that not all athletes can purchase the shoe. It is dependent on the sponser and when those companies produce something that is comparable.

If this trend continues though I expect to see quite a few more records drop soon.

The biggest issue I see is that not all athletes can purchase the shoe. It is dependent on the sponser and when those companies produce something that is comparable.

ahhhhhhhhhh I missedthat point entirely as it means if they are sponsored by Addidas, they can't suddenly don a pair of Nikes for contractual reasons. That does add an extra dimension to the debate.

Thanks for that. Its those sort of comments why I love Steem, you learn and get genuine new perspectives from people who genuinely know stuff in their own niche areas!

Enjoy the rest of your weekend :-)

I've heard rumblings that a lot of the shoe brands have shoes in the work. But they aren't released yet.

I guess when they are, everytime someone goes to buy running shoes they are going to try sell a $200 plus running shoe. -_-

Anyways... Have a fantastic weekend as well!!

In terms of running, I always saw Ethiopia winning the olympics into which I feel they have the advantage considering their way of life and the type of environment they had there.

Kenya and Ethiopia both. Altitude also plays a large part. I had a few Kenyan teammates when I ran in college and they were some of the most amazing people to watch run. My former teammate Sally Kipyego won the silver medal in the 10000 meters at the 2012 olympics!