Influence of the carbon fiber plate curvature of advanced footwear technology on the running energetic cost and 3000‑m performance
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ruiz Alías, Santiago Alejo; Pérez Castilla, Alejandro; Soto-Hermoso, Víctor M.; García Pinillos, FelipeEditorial
Springer
Materia
Road shoes Advanced footwear technology Running economy
Fecha
2024-06-19Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz Alias, S.A. et. al. Sports Eng 27, 21 (2024). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s12283-024-00465-5]
Patrocinador
Universidad de Granada/ CBUA; Spanish Ministry of Universities under grant (FPU19/00542)Resumen
This study aimed to explore the effect of two similar commercialized advanced footwear technology models differing mainly
in their plate geometry (i.e., low and high curvature plate) on the running energetic cost in both non-fatigued and fatigued
states. It also sought to determine their impacts on 3000-m performance. Twelve highly trained male athletes performed
four 5-min trials (two advanced technology models, two trials). In each experimental session, athletes completed a 3000-m
trial which was followed by a 5-min trial to test the running energetic cost when fatigued. Athletes exhibited a lower running
energetic cost when wearing the low curvature plate in a non-fatigued state (P = 0.034; − 1.13 [− 1.92 to − 0.11] %),
which persisted with better performance in the 3000-m trial (P = 0.017; − 0.42 [− 0.74 to − 0.09] %). However, in a fatigued
state, non-significant differences were reported (P = 0.207). The low curvature plate seems to be more effective than the
high curvature plate when running at low intensity in a fresh state as well as in a maximal high-intensity effort. However,
non-significant differences between plate geometries were observed when fatigue was increased.