Size Availability
Saucony
Buyer's Guides
Triumph
Weight & stack: 9.6 oz / 272g at M9.5; 10mm drop; ~37mm heel / 27mm forefoot. / Foam: PWRRUN PB (PEBA-style) midsole — same compound family as the Endorphin race line.
Progrid Triumph 4
Popularity: Niche rise helped by Jae Tips and Westside Gunn / Comfort: Roomy ProGrid cushioning, better for walking than flexing
Endorphin Speed 5
Use case: Plated tempo, daily training, HM racing — sits between trainer and racer. / Ride: Firm but cushioned PWRRUN PB; nylon plate adds snap; rocker is apparent but not aggressive.
Endorphin Speed
Plate & foam: Winged nylon plate inside PWRRUN PB (PEBA-style) foam; aggressive SpeedRoll rocker. / Use case: Tempo workouts, race-day at half-marathon or marathon distance, mixed daily long runs.
Triumph 23
Category: Premium max-cushion daily trainer; PWRRUN PB midsole with full-coverage outsole rubber. / Stack and drop: ~37mm heel / 27mm forefoot listed, ~42/32mm measured; 10mm drop — steep by 2025 standards.
Progrid Omni 9
Popularity: Saucony's flagship retro; the anti-hype alternative to NB saturation / Comfort: ProGrid heel cushioning with arch support; between ASICS and NB comfort
Endorphin Pro 4
Category: Carbon-plated marathon racer; PWRRUN HG (IncrediRUN) PEBA-blend midsole with full-length S-curve plate. / Fit: True to size in length but distinctly roomy and high-volume; loose lockdown out of the box.
Guide 7.3
Popularity: Niche 3sixteen collaboration, very small owner base / Comfort: Early-2000s trainer structure, not modern running foam
Shadow 6000
Popularity: Deep collab heritage; deliberately non-hype and accessible / Comfort: GRID cushioning comfortable for all-day wear; above Shadow 5000
Endorphin Elite
Construction: IncrediRUN PEBA-blend foam, forked carbon plate, rocker geometry, midfoot cutout (Elite 2); Elite 3 removes the cutout and adds a second foam layer for stability. / Sizing: Narrow last; consider a half size up for marathon distance — a US 11 marathon racer went 11.5 for toe-taper room and a midfoot reviewer also sized up half for long runs.
Grid Peak
Popularity: Useful inline model with modest niche attention / Comfort: Supportive and walkable for long casual days
Grid Web
Popularity: Growing niche favorite, still below Omni 9 / Comfort: Comfortable for a techy retro runner
3D Grid Hurricane
Popularity: Cult favorite in enthusiast rotations; limited mainstream visibility. / Comfort: Generally comfortable after short break-in, not ultra-plush.
Shadow 5000
Popularity: Saucony's signature collab platform — the brand's "Air Max 1" / Comfort: Firm midsole; adequate for casual wear, not for long walks
Peregrine 15
Heritage: Fifteenth iteration of Saucony's headline trail shoe; one of two trail shoes Saucony still supports. / Fit: Midfoot-snug Saucony heel with more toe-box room than Peregrine 13/14.
Jazz
Popularity: Steady cult retro, not Saucony’s hottest wave / Comfort: Comfortable enough daily, but plainly retro underfoot
Xodus Ultra
Use case: Max-cushion ultra and long trail efforts, including road-to-trail commuting. / Generation: Xodus Ultra 4 is the current pick; Xodus Ultra 3 was widely seen as a flop for fit.
Ride
Popularity: Strong runner uptake, sparse fashion-community visibility. / Comfort: Balanced cushioning, easy legs over daily mileage.
Kinvara 1
Use case: Casual and lifestyle reissue, short easy runs, gym, walking; not a modern training shoe. / Drop: 4mm low-drop — defining feature of the original Kinvara line.
Shadow Original
Popularity: Niche but warmly received by Saucony enthusiasts. / Comfort: Light, stable EVA ride; moderate cushioning, not plush.
Grid Aura X
Popularity: Visible, but not a breakout Saucony hit / Comfort: Decent casual comfort with supportive feel
Hurricane
Popularity: Mostly respected in runner circles, limited style chatter. / Comfort: Plush, protective ride for easy and long efforts.
ProGrid Guide 7
Popularity: Niche traction, boosted by recent limited releases. / Comfort: Stable and fairly comfortable, though not plush.
Azura
Popularity: Known by enthusiasts, not a mass Saucony staple / Comfort: Light and wearable, not especially cushioned
Grid Jazz 9
Popularity: Niche momentum, with visibility concentrated in collaborator drops. / Comfort: Generally described as comfortable straight out of the box.
Grid Shadow 2
Popularity: Niche but active, strongest in enthusiast circles. / Comfort: Comfortable daily; extended mileage comfort is less consistent.
ProGrid Paramount
Popularity: Niche buzz, mostly tied to one flagship collaboration. / Comfort: Promising signal, but mostly inferred from adjacent ProGrid models.
Matrix
Popularity: Mostly collab-driven buzz; little broad inline chatter. / Comfort: Some users expect comfort, but real wear data is thin.
Peregrine
Popularity: Strong in trail forums, scarce in sneaker culture. / Comfort: Firm-balanced ride, stable underfoot, limited long-run plushness.
Ride Millennium
Popularity: Niche visibility despite steady retailer exclusives. / Comfort: Frequently praised for casual all-day wear.
Trainer 80
Popularity: Niche relaunch with low mainstream sneaker traction. / Comfort: Light daily comfort, but support remains minimal-profile.
ProGrid V2
Popularity: Minimal community presence; overshadowed by Omni 9 and Triumph 4. / Comfort: Full-length EVA cushioning on the proven ProGrid platform.
Silo
Popularity: Niche buzz, limited broad style-community traction. / Comfort: Model-dependent comfort; some pairs feel unstable.
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