In a world of neutral feet and stability shoes, we often forget the rare supinator—underpronating and
underrepresented. For those whose feet actually roll outward slightly when they run, the Ride ISO 2 fills a void. The
shoe uses two types of foam: a softer Everun topsole that sits closer to the foot, and a more substantial PWRfoam
underbelly to
saucony ride womens dampen impact where you hit
the road.
The design cradles the foot a little deeper in that top layer, made from thousands of bouncy TPU pellets, which lends
more support while still remaining accessible to neutral feet. Like its predecessor, the Ride keeps its titular ISOfit
upper, with floating eyelets for fine-tuned lacing, that gives a secure fit through the midfoot. And although this
version feels slightly
saucony ride 10 womens firmer in the
heel, it’s still a softy overall.
We like that the Ride hits a happy medium in Saucony’s somewhat overwhelming assortment of neutral shoes. It’s
lighter than the ultra-plush Triumph, cheaper than the luxe Freedom, and more cushioned than the racy Kinvara—but
still delivers where those models especially shine. It’s no racer, but our testers say this shoe can dabble in
uptempos and
saucony ride iso long runs alike.
The underlying construction of the Ride remains mostly unchanged. The shoe still uses two types of midsole foam—a
thin layer of softer Everun closer to the foot and a firmer chunk of PWRfoam beneath it—but adds 2mm of the latter in
this update. Saucony has thinned the outsole slightly, so the stack height, weight, and 8mm drop are still the same,
but our testers
saucony shoes on sale and RW lab data confirmed that the
shoe feels a little different.