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#21 |
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Legend
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 7,180
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I think that the notion of "shock absorption" in a shoe can be misleading. That diagram above in charliefedererer's post shows misaligned ankles which can occur in any shoes that don't match up correctly to a player's feet, including sneak's designed for tennis. When I've found shoes that give me proper ankle alignment, I also get much better "shock absorption" from them, even if the soles of those shoes are especially thin.
Pounding on misaligned ankles will drive any of us straight to tendonitis town. I think that this is why it's important to pay attention to the descriptions of different shoes. Some are made for medium to wider feet, others for more narrow feet, and even for those with flatter or higher arches. As far as shoe stability and resisting ankle rolls works for me, I describe that by comparing an F-1 race car with a high-riding SUV. Turn hard in one direction or the other (yes, laterally) and which one is more likely to roll? The one that's got a higher center of gravity - the SUV. No comparison. My more stable shoes have been the same in that the closer they keep my feet to the court, the more stability I enjoy with them, even if the heel counter isn't built like the Alamo. Running shoes usually have a lot of "stuff" under the heel, which might be good for a runner who needs to have that cushy business under the heel to soften the repetitive landing when loping along. As a tennis player though, that only creates a higher platform that my heel can roll off of when I push sideways good and hard. The lower my foot is riding, the less leverage there is between my heel and the court to effectively "tip my ankle over". |
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| fuzz nation |
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#22 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 111
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The article seemed ok to me until it veered off the cliff with the below quote:
“I’m not saying everyone should go out and play in running shoes; I am saying that wearing quality running shoes to play tennis does not lose stability or risk injury versus a tennis shoe, and the advantage of the running shoe is they help you push off and move forward better than most tennis shoes,” says Grossman, who believes scanning technology has both performance and health benefits. First off, while he "says" he is not advocating everyone play tennis in running shoes, that is exactly what he seemd to be advocating in the next sentence. As others have said, running forward is not the dominant movement in tennis, and I think it is universally acknowledged that running shoes DO lack lateral stability and do increase risk of potential injury. Also, I think there HAVE been advances in tennis shoes since the old days. Shoes used in the wooden racquet days were very different than today. Old shoes were often more like canvas Chuck Taylor type. Granted, maybe there can be additional advances in shoes through the scientific processes discussed in the article. |
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| Tennis Truth |
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#23 |
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Legend
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,412
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You guys still use shoes to play tennis?
Don't you know that barefoot is the only way? The natural way? You are just slaves to the great sports shoe conspiracy man.
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“An ounce of bacon is worth a pound ounce of prevention.” |
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#24 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 3,272
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Well the body is a great shock absorbing mechanism, that is my experience.
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K90, Gosen OG Micro 16, 23 kg. |
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| Povl Carstensen |
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#25 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: soCal
Posts: 1,408
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#26 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Sydney, Aus
Posts: 2,706
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The only time I wore runners to tennis, when running forward and going into a slide, the high spacious top of the running shoes (rather than the flat boat-y prow of a tennis shoe) allowed my big toe to bobble up inside, the shoe gripped the tip of my big toenail and bent it back resulting in pain, a black toenail, and the loss of it later.
I stopped ever contemplating runners for tennis. I have seen someone wear the tough cross country hiking type boot (not leather) with the fairly raised teeth underneath, and as a non-flexy, tough and hard shoe it seemed to suit their flat non-explosive footwork on synthetic grass - they were a real grinder-type player - fairly well. Still, wouldn't want my toenail bent back in one of those. Interesting topic - caught my left toe while moving side to side last night and rolled my ankle. It was in a weakened state due to the last injury 6 weeks ago. Wasn't wearing my ASO brace. Am thinking to wear braces henceforth on both ankles as preventative (a la Murray, Hewitt et al). It's not just the shoes. I have wonderfully flexy and bendy ankles - it just so happens not particularly suited to tennis and will have to wear braces as preventative from now on because each rolled ankle is 4-6 weeks out. Last edited by bertrevert : 10-31-2011 at 05:15 PM. |
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#27 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 3,272
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Shoes badly aggrevates the risk and impact of rolling your ankle. Thats why Vivo Barefoot was invented, see http://tt.tennis-warehouse.com/showt...=329051&page=2
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K90, Gosen OG Micro 16, 23 kg. Last edited by Povl Carstensen : 11-01-2011 at 01:45 PM. |
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#28 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Sydney, Aus
Posts: 2,706
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Wouldn't want to be rolling ankles in runners.
To my mind tennis shoes have flanges underneath to offer greater contact and a flat non-rolling surface. Up top they offer far more lateral support with various built-in plastics and strapping in the shoe. Runners, put simply, are built for fwd moves and not side to side. Or look at it the other way. Go run on the road in tennis shoes eg. Barricades. Not very "runnerly" are they! If you are in runners on court I just don't think you can go for extreme moves, certainly not with confidence. |
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| bertrevert |
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#29 |
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Professional
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Sydney
Posts: 1,305
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Its also harder to slide with runners. Running shoes are fine, but you have to turn and run in a straight line to get those extreme shots. But running shoes are better at sprinting to dropshots.
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#30 |
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New User
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 59
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Running shoes are great for running in a straight line only. When agility is involved do not wear running shoes. There is a reason why you will never see a pro or college player wearing running shoes. No lateral stability!!!
My ankle hurts just thinking about this |
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| superfittennis |
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#31 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 102
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#32 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 102
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#33 |
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Legend
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: In front of my computer, obviously
Posts: 7,303
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I want to play like Federer, so I wear ballet slippers to play tennis.
Seriously, my tennis shoes were chosen to fit me differently than my (very expensive) New Balance running shoes. I have NB 'walking shoes' as well and they are hard for me to do my workout DVD's in because the sides are so high it rubs my heels when I do side lunges and other things. So I have running shoes, tennis shoes, walking/whatever shoes, and still need a pair of cross trainers or whatever for my dance-y/kickboxing/workout stuff. #firstworldproblems
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Pros should stop wasting money on coaches and doctors and just read the experts on this forum. |
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#34 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 3,564
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Wasn't the Nike Breathe Free 2 basically a modified running shoe with a slightly tougher sole?
I had a pair years ago. It looked like a running shoe, had an elevated heel with the big airbags under it, and was reasonably flexible. Actually, the bars connecting the heel to the forefoot on the outsole snapped on mine right away, so that might have made it more flexible. |
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| WildVolley |
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#35 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: The Great NW
Posts: 5,660
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#36 | |
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Hall Of Fame
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Quote:
Unless you are looking at cross-trainers, running shoes do not have the same amount of lateral support.
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Ludacris: My chick bad! Tell me if you seen her. She always brings the racket like Venus and Serena! |
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| JRstriker12 |
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#37 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 1,840
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I play every other time on hard courts in my nike running shoes.. it has helped my shin splints a lot. takes away that extra pounding .
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| chrischris |
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#38 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 395
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Quote:
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| newyorkstadium |
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#39 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 26,315
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I use the Federer Nike Vapor Airs from TW for everything - work, weekend chores, tennis, travel.
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#40 |
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Professional
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: NorCal
Posts: 1,045
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Depends on the running shoe,,not all running shoes are created equal, some cradle the foot to the ankle,,when I was growing up if you didn't wear converse all stars low cut-black,,you got funny looks from everyone on the tennis courts..
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