

With my longer toes, I usually have to decide between a shoe flexing in the right place or risking bloody tips. If the “comfort filter” means the shoe lets you move in your preferred motion path, everything falling in place as you roll through the stride, these fit the bill for me.

What this means to me is that the shoe flexes where my foot bends-all the way out to the 5th metatarsal-delivering an amazing feeling of stability as my toes engage and grip, smooth motion as my foot extends behind me, and power as I push off. In the midfoot before the 62% line, the EnRoute has an X-shaped torsion plate, keeping the shoe more rigid and helping it transition quickly to the forefoot, where deep flex grooves let the ball bend and toes do their thing without fighting the shoe.

That 75° angle they call the “ballet line,” tracing where your foot lifts off the ground when raising onto your toes, a more slanted flex line than found on most running shoes. A staple of Salming’s shoe design is “62/75”-the numbers denoting the distance from the heel to the ball of the foot (62% of the length), and the angle of the flex at that point (75°). The shoe is longer than most for the size, and the rubberized toe bumper creates a tall, roomy space for my long morton’s toe that is perennially blistered and black from bumping the front of most shoes.ĭespite the whole shoe being longer, however, the flex point actually falls sooner along the length of the shoe than in most shoes. It is shaped like my foot, snugging and securing the heel and arch while relaxing and opening up at the ball to allow for toe splay and flex. What sets the EnRoute 3 apart is how well it fits and moves with the foot. You prefer a flexible shoe that mimics the action of the foot, with a lightly-cushioned, slightly-bouncy ride. The midsole compound has been tweaked to be livelier and more flexible. The upper on version 3 of the EnRoute is simpler, a light, foot-hugging, double-layer knit with a stretchy, gusseted tongue. In a time when the majority of shoes have eschewed flexibility for stiff rockers, it is refreshing to find one that allows you to use your toes, without being minimal. Price: $145 photo: 101 Degrees West Top LineĪ simple but snappy shoe that fits the foot’s shape and moves the way the foot naturally wants to move. Get access to everything we publish when you
