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The science behind the Adidas shoes that helped two marathoners break the two-hour mark

Source: Scientific AmericanView Original
scienceApril 28, 2026

April 27, 2026

4 min read

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The science behind the Adidas shoes that helped two marathoners break the two-hour mark

A sub-two-hour marathon has long been seen as a tantalizing benchmark for elite runners—and shoemakers have been in a race to design footwear that can help them get there

By Adam Kovac edited by Claire Cameron

Sabastian Sawe celebrates winning the 2026 London Marathon.

Karwai Tang/WireImage via Getty Images

On Sunday three runners at the London Marathon set the sporting world on fire—not least because of their shared choice of footwear. Kenya’s Sabastian Sawe won the men’s race with a record-setting time of one hour, 59 minutes and 30 seconds (1:59:30) while Ethiopia’s Yomif Kejelcha came in second, finishing in 1:59:41, and fellow Ethiopian Tigist Assefa broke the women’s record with a time of 2:15:41. All three were wearing a pair of new Adidas shoes specifically designed for marathoning, the Adizero Adios Pro Evo 3.

The shoes’ apparent success is the latest shot fired in a long-simmering war among athletic wear companies to design footwear to help people move faster on long-distance runs. While “it’s gotta be the shoes” was once used as a tongue-in-cheek tagline for Air Jordans, there’s quite a bit of truth to that sentiment when it comes to marathoning, says Brad Wilkins, director of the University of Oregon’s Performance Research Laboratory.

“People are just getting faster and faster and faster, partially due to equipment, partially due to belief in the fact that we can run this fast and partially due to training and adaptations because of that belief,” he says.

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The Adizero Adios Pro Evo 3 is somewhat odd looking when compared to a regular running shoe. The sole is packed with padding that surrounds a curved carbon plate, all of which gives the shoe the appearance of the bottom of a rocking chair. The design is all about economy, Wilkins explains. The padding is made of ultralightweight foam, which keeps the shoe’s mass as low as possible while still providing cushioning for the foot. The carbon plate, meanwhile, is designed to put the runner “kind of in a forward tilt,” he says. If you were just walking in the shoes, you would find it more difficult to get around than you would in an average pear of sneakers. But a long-distance runner’s stride is fundamentally different from the gait of someone going for a stroll.

“It puts you more on your forefoot,” Wilkins says, referring to the bend in such running shoes. “Some of the models of these shoes don’t even have outsoles in the heel. They’re basically expecting that you’re going to be running on your forefoot the whole time.”

The reason for that assumption is that conserving energy is one of the keys to success in marathoning. A running gait that primarily uses the front of the foot is more efficient than one that has the heel making contact with the ground. That’s because pressing down on the ground with the heel can generate backward momentum, requiring the runner to use more energy to propel themselves forward.

The materials and design of these shoes combine to “increase the springlike capability of the leg by adding, essentially, a spring on your foot,” says Daniel Lieberman, a professor of biological sciences at Harvard University and an amateur marathoner. “When a runner hits the ground with these shoes, the shoe is storing up elastic energy, and then it’s recoiling, pushing the runner back up into the air.”

He estimates that the latest generation of marathon shoes could help runners expend 4 to 6 percent less energy per stride.

“There’s no question, study after study shows these shoes are responsible for people running faster because they have more energy, and more energy means more gas on the tank,” he says.

In a statement, Adidas’ general manager of running Patrick Nava said that the Adizero Adios Pro Evo 3 shoes are the result of “more than a dozen iterations, working closely with our athletes and testing everywhere from our labs in Herzogenaurach [in Germany] to high-altitude camps in Kenya and Ethiopia.”

“At that level, every detail really matters—we were measuring things down to the nearest nanogram,” Nava said. “It was a long process, but it’s led to something we believe genuinely changes what a race-day shoe can feel like.”

Marathon times have grown steadily shorter since the distance of 42.195 kilometers (26.2 miles) was formalized in 1921. That’s

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