Why "yikes?" What's your opinion?
The "yikes" was mainly due to the length of the article. I must admit, though, that I am more than a little leery of "barefoot"/"minimalist" running. I have done a decent amount of research on my own, and the argument I've heard against it that makes the most sense to me is the following:
Sure, human's bare feet at one point had to carry them many miles every day, but throughout the process of evolution, we eventually started wearing shoes. Since that time, human feet have evolved WITH shoes, and there should be no reason to think that human feet haven't adapted over the years to wearing shoes...thus debunking the "we were made to run miles and miles every day without shoes" argument--because that's not necessarily what we're still made for in the current day.
I also wonder if a person changed their running style to run as if they were barefoot (light on your feet, landing on the balls of your feet instead of pounding the ground with your heels), would they see the same "benefits" that barefoot runners see?
And as a personal anecdote, cushioned running shoes always helped me recover from my many running/stress-related injuries. I played soccer, and soccer cleats (a variant of "minimalist" as far as cushioning goes, but admittedly not what proponents of "minimalist" shoes are advocating) always made my injuries much, much worse.
And I have yet to hear a podiatrist support them, but I think it would be very interesting if one did. I would love to hear the argument there. (Not being sarcastic, would really love to hear it!
🙂)
I am very interested to see any long term meta-analysis studies--does anyone know when exactly they started collecting data on the barefoot running injury correlations?