
ASICS
SUPERBLAST 2
Marathon workhorse, but loud and clunky at slow paces.
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I got a pair of these recently and am surprised they are actually pretty good in the width. I was having difficult finding the right size in these and even tried men's. Finally, the second person I saw at the running shoe store recommended to size up a bit. So I went from my normal 10 and 1/2 to 11 and that made all the difference. I think the shoe might run a tiny bit small. One thing I don't like about these though is that I think they're over cushioned, and don't give my arch quite enough support. I bought different insoles to help with that, but it still feels like the show let's my arch sink in the middle, while my toes and heel are up higher. Could be just me though, so I suggest to give them a try.
I have this exact problem. I like the New Balance 860 v2
People can recommend shoes, but it might just be more waste of money. Shoes are not cheap. Best bet is go to a running shoe store and spend 20 minutes trying on shoes they recommend. I would do that and buy the pair there and then go online and find the previous year's model and buy that at a bigger discount. Stability with cushion would be something like Brooks Adrenaline or Glycerin or New Balance 860 or ASICS Gel-Kayano or Saucony Guide. If you are having foot pain custom insoles from a foot doctor would be the best bet. I had to do that after fracturing my foot twice.
I've been wearing New Balance 860 for at least 10 years. I usually have at least 50 miles on them for race rehearsal (about a month in advance of a race).
Start with stability shoes since you have got knock knees they help control pronation. Check out ASICS Gel-Kayano, New Balance 860, or Brooks Adrenaline (all offer wide sizes and solid support). HOKA Arahi is great if you want max cushioning without losing stability. Try them on in-store late afternoon (feet swell), walk a bit and consider a firm orthotic if you need extra correction. Worth paying a bit more for fit it saves your knees and lasts longer.
If Adrenaline GTS works for you, I’d look at New Balance 860, Saucony Guide, Mizuno Wave Inspire, or Hoka Arahi as similar “daily stability” shoes that are often cheaper (especially last year’s model on sale). Also worth noting: overpronation by itself isn’t always a problem unless you’re getting pain so prioritize comfort + stable feel over “maximum correction.” I pronate a lot too… (Disclosure: I built a free shoe-compare / finder tool happy to share if you want.)

ASICS
SUPERBLAST 2
Marathon workhorse, but loud and clunky at slow paces.

Nike
Vomero Plus
Ultra-comfortable for long runs, but too bulky for speed.

Saucony
Endorphin Pro 4
Stable race shoe, versatile, but narrow fit, lacks bounce.

ASICS
Megablast
Very durable and versatile, but narrow toe box, causes blisters.

Mizuno
Neo Zen
Plush and versatile, but can be too soft and unstable.

Ranked #1
Brooks - Glycerin GTS 22

Ranked #1
Puma - Velocity NITRO™ 4

Ranked #1
ASICS - SUPERBLAST 2

Ranked #1
ASICS - SUPERBLAST 2

Ranked #1
ASICS - SUPERBLAST 2

Ranked #1
Nike - Vomero Plus