The Adidas Adizero SL is positioned as a lightweight daily trainer. The relevant question for an Indian runner is not whether it is a good shoe in general — that is a matter of subjective preference — but for which training sessions the shoe's documented properties produce a defensible benefit, and at what point in the training week it should be deployed. This article works through that question on the published evidence and the shoe's stated specifications.
The Adizero SL is best understood as a middle-of-the-rotation trainer. It is not a peak-day racing shoe; nor is it a recovery shoe. The empirical case for it sits in the moderate-pace training sessions that most weekly programmes underfill. The argument below identifies four defensible use cases and one important caveat about the foam.
What the research says about lightweight daily trainers
A 2019 review in the Journal of Sport and Health Science examined the relationship between shoe mass and running economy, concluding that for every 100 grams of additional shoe mass, oxygen consumption rises by roughly one per cent at submaximal paces. The implication for daily training is that a shoe in the 220 to 260 gram range, like the Adizero SL, produces a measurable economy benefit over heavier trainers in the 290 to 320 gram range during workouts at threshold or faster.
A 2023 paper in the European Journal of Sport Science extended this work and reported that the benefit is largest during interval and tempo work, with smaller effects on easy aerobic running. The defensible conclusion: a lightweight trainer earns its place in the rotation during faster sessions, not on easy days where the metabolic cost saving is small.
The mass-versus-cushion trade-off
Lighter trainers tend to have lower stack heights and less protective foam. The literature on cushioning and injury risk remains contested. A 2020 BJSM editorial concluded that no single shoe variable — stack, drop, or weight — has been demonstrated to reduce injury risk in randomised controlled studies. The current best practice is therefore to match shoe to session rather than to optimise a single shoe across all sessions.
Training use case 1: Threshold and tempo sessions
The Adizero SL's lower weight makes it a defensible choice for sessions at half-marathon to threshold pace, where the mass-economy relationship described in the 2019 review delivers the largest practical benefit. A typical Indian weekly programme has one threshold session, often a midweek tempo of 25 to 40 minutes.
Session structure
Examples: 3 x 10 minutes at threshold with two-minute jog recoveries; 30 minutes continuous at threshold; 6 x 1 km at 10K pace with 200-metre jog recoveries. The Adizero SL is worn for the entire session, including warm-up and cool-down. Use the STRIDD plan generator to structure weekly placement and assign shoe categories to each session type.
Why this is the strongest use case
Threshold work is the pace window where the shoe's weight advantage and forefoot rocker geometry produce the largest economy gain in the published data. It is also a pace window most runners undertrain in, because the daily trainer feels sluggish at threshold. A shoe that feels appropriate to the session removes one psychological barrier to running the session at the correct intensity.
Training use case 2: The midweek progression run
A second defensible use is the progression run — a session that starts at easy pace and finishes at marathon to half-marathon pace. The Adizero SL's geometry accommodates both ends of the pace range, where a stiff racing shoe would be wrong at the easy end and a heavy daily trainer would be wrong at the fast end.
Session structure
An 80-minute progression: 40 minutes easy, 20 minutes at marathon pace, 15 minutes at half-marathon pace, 5 minutes easy. Or a simpler version: 60 minutes with the last 20 minutes at marathon pace. These sessions are particularly useful in the specific phase of marathon training, where they rehearse the back end of the race effort without the recovery cost of a true marathon-pace long run.
What the literature is cautious about
The progression-run literature is small. The defensible position is to use the session sparingly — once every two weeks during the specific phase — and to monitor for cumulative fatigue. For a deeper view of where the Adizero SL fits among other plated and non-plated options, see the super-shoe comparison 2026.
Training use case 3: The shake-out run before a race
The third use is the pre-race shake-out, typically a 20 to 30-minute easy effort the day before or two days before a goal race. The shake-out has a small documented effect on race-day performance — a 2017 study in the International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance reported no significant performance difference between a shake-out group and a complete-rest group — but it has a defensible psychological role for runners who feel stiff after a taper.
Session structure
20 to 30 minutes very easy. Optionally include 4 x 30-second strides. The Adizero SL works well because it is light enough to feel race-adjacent without being a racing shoe. Indian runners racing in plated shoes can use the SL for the shake-out and reserve the racing shoe for the start line.
Training use case 4: General-purpose moderate mileage
The fourth use is general moderate-intensity mileage during base building, when the weekly programme has one tempo, one long run, and the rest is steady aerobic work in the 5:00 to 6:00 per kilometre range. The Adizero SL handles this range without the heaviness of a maximal-cushion trainer.
What this is not
This is not a recovery-day use case. For recovery runs at 7:00 per kilometre or slower, the published research does not support a lightweight trainer as the optimal choice. A higher-stack, softer-foam shoe like the Hoka Bondi 9 produces a different protective profile that is more defensible for recovery work. For cheaper trainer alternatives, see the cheaper alternatives guide.
Foam durability — the important caveat
Lightweight daily trainers, including the Adizero SL, typically show a shorter durable lifespan than heavier trainers. Published test-fleet data and manufacturer guidance suggest a functional lifespan of 500 to 700 kilometres for trainers in this weight range, against 700 to 900 kilometres for heavier daily trainers. Plan for a replacement at the lower end if you train above 50 km per week.
For a broader view of where the Adizero SL fits in the gear archive, see STRIDD gear and the Running Lab home for related guides.