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2023 Boston Marathon Shoes

May 28, 2023

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A look at the super shoes from Adidas, Asics, and On that competed with Nike on the sport’s biggest stage.

We’ve come a long way since Nike ruled the pavement in big city marathons. Seemingly every brand has a super shoe and the runners who can contend for podium places. In fact, we scoped out the feet of the top runners at this year’s Boston Marathon and found that only two of the top 10 men were wearing the Swoosh. The women fared better, with four lacing up the new Vaporfly 3.

But the day belonged to Adidas: the top four men were all flashing three stripes, and three of the top 10 women wore the same Adios Pro 3 shoes. There were some other surprises among the best running shoes. Read on to find out who else got into the top placings this year.

Evans Chebet claimed his second consecutive Boston win in a flashy orange pair.

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Test editor Morgan Petruny reviewed this speedster when it came out.

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Nike told us “Eliud is wearing items from the upcoming Eliud Kipchoge Collection, coming this fall.” Until then, you’ll have to settle for the standard color of the shoe.

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We’ve seen this shoe pop up in other races lately, including the Tokyo Marathon. And, although it’s a prototype, it’s likely the “development” shoe that’s on World Athletics’ list of approved shoes—under Manuals & Guidelines, “Dev 163” is approved until December 3, 2023. No information about the shoe’s availability has been provided yet so, for now, you’re stuck with the Alphafly 2.

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We included Mantz here to round out the top three American runners. Mantz went way back to the original Alphafly. (Spy that pointy heel.) In January, we saw him testing out a black prototype of the Alphafly 3 at the Houston Half-Marathon (search Mantz on marathonfoto.com for pics). The current model, the Alphafly 2, received some considerable tweaks from what he wore in Boston.

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It seems Obiri won the Boston Marathon in a shoe built for triathletes. This looks to be the same shoe that caused a dustup earlier this year in a tri race. The CloudTri is included on the World Athletics list of approved shoes for road races. So, too, is the Cloudboom Echo 3.0, the company’s first true super shoe for long road races, which Obiri wore at the New York City Marathon last fall.

(I ran a few miles in Cloudboom on Sunday during Boston Marathon weekend during a shakeout jog with On, but it won’t be available until July.)

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Salpeter rocketed to the finish on Boylston wearing Nike’s just-released top end racer. I recently reviewed that shoe at length.

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At a glance, this might look like the garden variety Metaspeed Sky+ we saw on other top finishers. But look more closely at the right shoe’s heel. See the light blue smudge on the foam? It looks like the “BOSTON 127” stamp we saw on other prototype shoes, perhaps identifying them as having been inspected and approved for use. The detailing of the sidewall also looks different from any of the other Metaspeed shoes Asics has previously released.

Which model is it? We’ve reached out to Asics to see if they’ll share any more details, but the company has three “development” shoes approved by World Athletics.

Weldu took sixth in a pink pair of shoes from Xtep, a brand from China that we don’t see here in the U.S. The shoe has a blue stamp on the right heel, indicating it’s a development pair, but the 160X 2.0 has been available for purchase globally.

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Second American woman, Aliphine wore Hoka’s just-released super shoe—the Rocket we’ve long been waiting for. Amanda Furrer reviewed the Rocket X 2 last month.

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Rojas was the third American woman across the finish line and, like Scott Fauble, she wore the AF3 prototype. Note the blue stamp.

This entry is a notable mention, just because it’s neat. Check out the design on the inside of Brinkman’s leading foot—that’s the logo used on Nike’s trail footwear. On the roads, she’s a member of the NN Running Team (with Eliud Kipchoge), but she’s also on the Nike Trail team. It’s a cool pair of custom kicks she wore to place 15th at this year’s Boston Marathon.

Jeff is Runner-in-Chief for Runner's World, guiding the brand's shoes and gear coverage. A true shoe dog, he's spent more than a decade testing and reviewing shoes. In 2017, he ran in 285 different pairs of shoes, including a streak of 257 days wearing a different model.

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1st — Evans Chebet, 2:05:542nd — Gabriel Geay, 2:06:043rd — Benson Kipruto, 2:06:064th — Albert Korir, 2:08:015th — Zouhair Talbi, 2:08:356th — Eliud Kipchoge, 2:09:237th — Scott Fauble, 2:09:448th — Hassan Chahdi, 2:09:469 — John Korir, 2:10:0410 — Matthew McDonald, 2:10:173rd American (11th) — Conner Mantz, 2:10:251st — Hellen Obiri, 2:21:382nd — Amane Beriso, 2:21:503rd — Lonah Salpeter, 2:21:574th — Ababel Yeshaneh, 2:22:00 — A5th — Emma Bates, 2:22:10 — E6th — Nazret Weldu, 2:23:25 — N7th — Angela Tanui, 2:24:12 — A8th — Hiwot Gebremaryam, 2:24:30 — H9th — Mary Ngugi, 2:24:33 — M2nd American (11th) — Aliphine Tuliamuk, 2:24:37 — A10th — Gotytom Gebreslase, 2:24:34 — G3rd American (14th) — Nell Rojas, 2:24:51Nienke Brinkman, 2:24:58