New looks

Turn Your Feet Into A Launching Pad 

Sam Snead used to play golf barefoot, and he might have been on to something. The latest golf shoes are trying to support the way your foot naturally wants to move.

"The key is to make the shoe and foot work as one unit," says Dr. Steven Weinfeld, associate professor of orthopedic surgery at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York who specializes in the treatment of foot and ankle disorders. "That optimizes the transfer of force from the foot to the ground."

New shoes from ADIDAS (Tour 360 3.0), ECCO (Classic GTX) and FOOTJOY (SYNR-G) were designed with this idea in mind. All three seek to improve lateral stability with the use of thermoplastic urethane (TPU) in internal and external design features, including a beneath-the-insole bridge in Ecco's Classic GTX. In addition, each shoe features a way to keep the heel in place, including an external-molded TPU frame on the heel of the Adidas Tour 360 3.0 and a friction-reducing internal silicone heel pad on FootJoy's SYNR-G.

"If the foot is moving even a little within the shoe, you've got an unstable situation," says Weinfeld, who believes that shoes without metal spikes are actually healthier, too. "Metal spikes stick in the ground, and that's where we've been more likely to see injuries."

1
By Mike Stachura
Photos By Jim Herity September 2008
 
Foot Joy
2

FOOTJOY

The SYNR-G ($200, available in January, footjoy.com) uses a thermoplastic-urethane wrap extended up from the outsole in three areas for extra lateral stability.

 
ECCO
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ECCO

The Classic GTX ($210, eccogolf.com) adds support inside the shoe with a stabilizing ring of polyurethane beneath the removable insole to help prevent the heel from sliding inside the shoe.

 
Adidas
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ADIDAS

The Tour 360 3.0 ($180, adidas.com) uses molded thermoplastic-urethane external supports in the mid-foot and heel. It also has four heel cleats (twice the standard) and a close-to-the-ground sole profile.

 
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January 07, 2009

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