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How Running Went High Tech

Forget your $285 Nike Alphaflys and that $150 Salomon technical vest. The biggest flex is turning up to run club with a perfect recovery score on Oura or Whoop.
Running a race
24-year-old Elliot Johnson has used an Oura ring and a Garmin smartwatch throughout his training for the Ironman 70.3 World Championships in New Zealand later this year. (Elliot Johnson)

For the past four years, 31-year-old Sonam Shah has been part of an after-work running club in London, frequented by a mixture of city workers and creative types.

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Further Reading

Inside Nike’s Big Marketing Vibe Shift

The return of company veteran Nicole Hubbard Graham as CMO and the rollout of its ‘Winning Isn’t for Everyone’ campaign have helped fuel a push to restore Nike’s marketing glory after the brand ran off course. 'Do I think Nike stopped believing that the notion of winning could continue to grow this brand? Maybe.'

Fashion’s Sports Obsession Is No Accident

The Olympics are proving a perfect marriage of the sports and fashion industries. It’s the culmination of several factors that have turned sport into fashion’s most exciting new arena over the past two years.

Inside New Balance’s Plan to Become a $10 Billion Sportswear Giant

In under a decade, the Boston-based company transformed itself from a brand for dads and runners into one of the hottest players in the sneaker world. Now, it’s using the Olympics and an expanding roster of collaborators, athlete partners and sports categories as catalysts to achieve its lofty ambitions.

About the author
Daniel-Yaw Miller

Daniel-Yaw Miller is a contributing writer at The Business of Fashion. Miller is a New York based journalist, editor and advisor who specialises in sports, fashion and business.

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