Int J Sports Med 2023; 44(14): 1067-1074
DOI: 10.1055/a-2156-2553
Training & Testing

Well-trained Endurance Runners’ Foot Contact Patterns: Barefoot vs. Shod Condition

Manuel Mosqueira-Ouréns
1   Faculty of Physiotherapy, Podiatry and Occupational Therapy, San Antonio Catholic University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain
,
Iker Muñoz-Pérez
2   Faculty of Education and Sport Sciences, University of Deusto, Bilbao, Spain
,
José Luis Tuimil
3   Performance and Health Group, Physical and Sports Education Department, Faculty of Sports Sciences and Physical Education, University of A Coruna, A Coruna, Spain
,
Martín Saleta-Cobos
4   Hospital Son Llatzer, Hospital Son Llatzer, Palma de Mallorca, Spain
,
Adrian Varela-Sanz
3   Performance and Health Group, Physical and Sports Education Department, Faculty of Sports Sciences and Physical Education, University of A Coruna, A Coruna, Spain
› Author Affiliations
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Abstract

We aimed to investigate the initial foot contact and contact time in experienced endurance runners at individualized speeds, in running shoes and barefoot. Forty-eight participants (33.71±7.49 y, 70.94±8.65 kg, 175.07±7.03 cm, maximum aerobic speed 18.41±1.54 km.h-1) were distributed into three groups according to athletic performance: highly-trained runners, middle-trained runners, and control group. An incremental running test until exhaustion was performed for assessing maximum aerobic speed. After≥24 h of recovery participants randomly walked and ran, barefoot and in running shoes, over a pressure plate at ~4.7 km.h-1 and 85% of the maximum aerobic speed, respectively. They wore the same model of running shoes with homogeneous lacing pattern. A rearfoot strike was performed by 68.8% and 77.1% of participants when running barefoot and in running shoes, respectively. Considering the tendency to develop a rearfoot strike was lower in the barefoot condition, runners with higher performance may benefit from training in minimalist running shoes because their foot contact pattern could tend towards a non-rearfoot strike. Our results suggest that initial foot contact and contact time are related to running performance and may also be influenced by running shoes.



Publication History

Received: 22 April 2023

Accepted: 08 August 2023

Article published online:
22 September 2023

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