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howeeee 01-14-13 01:51 PM


Originally Posted by Rowan (Post 15130160)
Oh OK, all those real sportspeople running laps as preseason training in team games, and playing all season on grass, artificial and real, must be in for a bad injury time. ;) Let alone the track and field athletes who would boycott an event run on asphalt.

Trust me, the majority of people running on MUPs wouldn't have a clue about the science of running, much less about running on their forefoot, a trend that started with athletics and the use of spikes on running shoes.

Wrong all the African long distance runners have been running barefoot for years, with little injury. While us Americans were running on cushy shoes always injured.

A football team training a couple of laps around the track is not the same as a runner going 50 miles or more a week, you are comparing apples to oranges. Running on grass to train for a marathon wouldnt work, you would be injured before the race.

Almost every marathon is run on concrete and asphalt , I dont what planet you are living on.

I am a former long distance runner finished Marathons and hundreds of smaller races.


By the way go look up the health of former football players, many can barely walk after 45 years old.

daveF 01-14-13 04:36 PM


Originally Posted by howeeee (Post 15156140)
Wrong all the African long distance runners have been running barefoot for years, with little injury. While us Americans were running on cushy shoes always injured.

A football team training a couple of laps around the track is not the same as a runner going 50 miles or more a week, you are comparing apples to oranges. Running on grass to train for a marathon wouldnt work, you would be injured before the race.

Almost every marathon is run on concrete and asphalt , I dont what planet you are living on.

I am a former long distance runner finished Marathons and hundreds of smaller races.


By the way go look up the health of former football players, many can barely walk after 45 years old.

I'm not so sure about the Africans suffering from few running injuries. They've had their share as well, whether bare foot or shoe'd. I haven't seen any specific statistics on it, but I've seen a number of the pros injured. If their is a lesser rate, it is probably due to size. They do tend to weigh a little less than American or European pros & their is probably a much stronger correllation to running injuries & weight than any other factor.

I've ran a number of ultra-marathons on my own training for ironman distance triathlons. Once a week in the mornings before work. No problem with running them in shoes, wouldn't want to shoeless.

jon c. 01-14-13 06:31 PM

We used to ride the 30 mile MUP at the beach, but as the area has become more and more crowded we've had to go back to the road. In the last five years or so there's been an explosion of people on rented beach cruisers that tend to weave about at 5 mph. Coupled with the families with strollers, it simply became to dangerous to ride at even 10 mph.

009jim 01-14-13 10:10 PM


Originally Posted by HawkOwl (Post 15124321)
By what logic or information do you make this apparently gigantic leap?

If you're implying that you disagree with the conclusion, then I take it you believe that a person who shows they are not very thoughtful or considerate in one scenario is, however, likely to be very thoughtful and very considerate in another scenario which is almost identical except for the type of vehicle they are using.

So would I deduct from that, further, that a person who acts thoughtlessly when jogging in Nike running shoes is likely to be completely safe when jogging in Puma shoes??:)


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