Yes, they do make a difference. I am probably in the same running status as you, so I think it's a good comparison. I bought them years ago, when I was in Boulder doing college visits with my son. I bought them for light hiking, but I also have run my local trails in them several times. Better ankle support and the bottoms are going to help you with the terrain, like rocks, etc. I have found myself splayed out on the trail more than once, even with these shoes, so anything helps. I would compare it to smooth vs. knobby tires on a bike. It's possible mine are light hikers and not real trail running shoes, but for what I do, they are fine. I find myself wearing them even for more technical hiking, as my feet are happier (I just read an article about this. Apparently, it's a trend for hikers to wear trail runners). I would buy them, as you can also use them for walking on trails and hiking.



I've a neutral foot strike and my LRS strongly recommends these for me - they've not steered me wrong yet. They are the ones who showed me that I've been wearing FAR too small a running shoe in the past...
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) and it wasn't pretty.
but that's why you start the minimal thing a very little bit at a time, and I think you're supposed to start with a tenth of a mile, not a half ...
