| Nike launches new, legal Alphafly 
			shoe to outrun 'tech doping' furore
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			 [February 06, 2020] 
			By Mitch Phillips 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Nike has launched a 
			new running shoe that complies with limits set by World Athletics 
			after the governing body imposed a landmark ban on a version of the 
			sportswear giant's Vaporfly shoes that was used to run the first 
			sub-two hour marathon.
 
 The first-ever shoe ban by World Athletics (WA) last week addressed 
			concerns that technology advances are giving athletes an unfair and 
			unnatural advantage, described by some critics as "technological 
			doping".
 
 New rules state road shoes must have soles no thicker than 40mm and 
			not contain more than one rigid, embedded carbon fibre plate, and 
			limit the use of some track spikes on the Vaporfly models, but 
			permit the continued use of most of the range.
 
 Nike has now duly launched the latest incarnation of the shoe - the 
			Air Zoom Alphafly Next% - with one carbon plate and a sole thickness 
			of 39.5mm, as well as newly added air pockets.
 
			
			 
			"We are pleased the Nike Zoom Vaporfly series and Nike Zoom Alphafly 
			NEXT% remain legal," said the U.S company. "We will continue our 
			dialogue with World Athletics and the industry on new standards."
 The Vaporfly controversy has ignited a wider sporting debate: where 
			should the line be drawn between advances in sports technology and 
			equipment giving competitors an unfair advantage, be it running 
			shoes, soccer boots or tennis rackets?
 
			Nike has always said it operates within the rules, while exploring 
			the possibilities provided by new technology. Its Vaporfly shoes 
			have led to a slew of world records since their introduction in 2016 
			but WA ruled last week that most of the versions used for those 
			records, and by thousands of amateur runners, would remain legal.
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			Kenya's Eliud Kipchoge, the marathon world record holder, runs 
			wearing Nike Vaporfly shoes during his attempt to run a marathon in 
			under two hours in Vienna, Austria, October 12, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger/ 
            
			 
            Kenyan runner Eliud Kipchoge used a version of the Vaporfly now 
			deemed illegal for his unofficial sub-two hour marathon in October, 
			a model reportedly with extra-thick soles and three carbon plates. 
			He is expected to use the Alphafly in his London marathon showdown 
			with Ethiopian rival Kenenisa Bekele in April's London Marathon.
 After launching the new shoe on Wednesday, Nike CEO John Donahoe 
			said it did not give athletes a "mechanical advantage".
 
 "It's simply using the same materials that go into a shoe and 
			putting them together in an innovative way that allows the athlete 
			to do their very best in a safe way," Donahoe said in an interview 
			with CNBC.
 
 A Wall Street Journal report said limited numbers of the new 
			Alphafly shoes will be made available to the public online this 
			month, thereby meeting one of WA's eligibility requirements for the 
			shoe to be used at this year's Tokyo Olympics.
 
 (Additional reporting by Rohith Nair; Editing by Pravin Char)
 
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