Carbon shoes are a performance enhancer — especially at the highest level, they're pretty much non-negotiable for racing. But the plate adds a rocker effect to the shoe, which moves the work done by the body from the ankle upward — up to the knee and up to the hip. Those shoes basically take a lot of the work away from the muscles in your feet and ankles, specifically the Achilles tendon.
We know these shoes change your biomechanics — there's solid research showing we land differently in highly cushioned shoes than in minimal ones or barefoot. On an unstable surface, we stiffen our joints. On a stable one, we soften them. Counterintuitive, but that's how the body works. So with a highly cushioned shoe, we actually tend to land stiffer — and I've had runners come in with more impact-related, joint-related pain in these shoes.
We don't have enough longitudinal research yet to know the long-term effects. But we do know how they change load distribution. If you're going to race in carbon shoes — and you probably should — then it's even more important that you're training the foot and ankle specifically outside of running. The AxisBoard is built for exactly this. You can target the rearfoot or the forefoot, and train in different planes of motion — which is how the foot actually works. We've got different segments of the foot that move in different ways, and strengthening them in those specific orientations improves resilience and gives you the control the rocker shoe is quietly taking away. Before Sidekick I was using a foam pad or a standard balance board. The foam pad, as I know now from clinical practice, is not appropriate — it adds too much extraneous movement and doesn't replicate what the foot experiences in running. The AxisBoard is specific in a way those tools aren't.
It has to be short. That's the reality. Post-training, two things always happen: stiff calves, which activates the Achilles and is very uncomfortable — and tight hips. So before any session, making sure the hip flexors are loose. That's non-negotiable. You are much better off doing a couple of minutes every day to keep yourself healthy than rehabbing an injury once it has flared up. That's not an opinion — that's what I see clinically, and what I live personally.
For the strength work, I was using plyo boxes and benches that just took up enormous space — trying to get different heights for step ups, eccentric calf raises, different exercises meant either buying multiple pieces or compromising the movement. The LadderPod replaced all of that. 12 adjustable heights, one tool. I can drop it low for eccentric calf raises to load the Achilles, bring it up for step ups and step downs for glute and quad strength, go higher for explosive work. And I combine it with the Heel Hero for the push-off phase of gait — a reverse lunge onto the LadderPod with the Heel Hero under the back foot trains the toe flexors in a lengthened position, which is crucial for runners. That's something you can't replicate with a standard box or a flat floor.
The other thing is just the consistency piece. Running and cycling and swimming do not inherently make your muscles strong. You can get really good at moving in one direction and really weak at moving in others. That's how repetitive stress injuries happen. Strength work challenges those weaknesses. It doesn't have to be a long session. It has to happen every day.