Abstract:
There is described a sports shoe, especially a golf shoe, having a sole on which downwardly projecting ground-engaging elements are mounted or can be mounted. It is provided according to the invention that the ground-engaging elements ( 9 ), or the means ( 10 ) provided for mounting them, are guided and held to move forward and backward along an arc, especially an arc of a circle.

Description:
This application is a divisional of U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 10/532,277 filed 21 Apr. 2005 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,549,239. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of the Invention 
     The present invention relates to a sports shoe for golfers. 
     2. Description of Related Art 
     Golf shoes have a more or less profiled plastic sole which, with a view to improving their grip and increasing the golfer&#39;s stability, are provided with projecting ground-engaging elements, especially spikes, that penetrate more or less deeply into the turf or into the ground. Spikes may consist of steel, or a ceramic material, and are also available as so-called soft spikes or plastic spikes. Soft spikes are prescribed on some golf courses because they are said to cause less damage to the golf course than spikes made from steel or a ceramic material. Spikes may either be firmly anchored in the sole, or may be exchangeable. In the latter case it is common practice to provide the sole with threaded holes, for example to embed metallic threaded bushes in the sole, into which spikes with a matching external thread can be screwed. 
     When driving the ball, especially when teeing-off, the player&#39;s trunk and waist should ideally rotate about a stationary axis which should coincide with the player&#39;s spinal column. The player should swing the golf club in upward direction, then back and in downward direction, forwards and through the position of the ball, and should finally continue the swinging movement in the direction of the envisaged target, while rotating his trunk and waist, and terminate the movement in a posture in which his breast and his pelvis are turned in the direction in which the golf ball flies. At the end of the swinging movement, the player&#39;s posture should be such that he looks in the direction of his target, with his breast and pelvis facing the target, while his left foot—if he is a right-hander—remains standing in its original direction, crosswise to the finishing line, but is clearly bent over in the direction of the target, so that the outer edge of the user&#39;s left foot points toward the ground and the inner edge of his left foot is lifted off, while his right foot has been turned into the direction of his target with the heel lifted high up from the ground. For a left-handed player, the roles of his left and right foot, respectively, are reversed so that the left foot is bent over and his right heel is lifted off the ground. During the driving movement, the player&#39;s body is subjected to heavy torsion, which propagates from the foot to the top of his spinal column and which strains his ligaments and joints. It is for this reason that golfers, especially players who practice their sport frequently and who are or not so thoroughly trained and/or have already reached a certain age—this is almost the rule with golfers—frequently suffer from strain, overstretching, tenseness, dislocation and/or pain in the region of their back and their legs. A golf shoe known from DE 100 30 917 A1, provided with a twisting plate with spikes on its heel portion, is likewise not capable of preventing these effects. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     Now, it is the object of the present invention to open up a way how to mitigate the strain and damaging effects on players&#39; bodies that occur as a result of the unnatural swinging movements performed when driving the golf ball. 
     This object is achieved by a sports shoe having the features defined in the claims. 
     While the invention will be described hereafter only with reference to a right-handed person, the explanations given apply to left-handed persons correspondingly. 
     When a golfer—a right-hander—wears a conventional golf shoe his left foot, which has the function to provide the necessary stability during swinging movements, cannot follow that movement because the spikes have dug into the ground or the turf. On the other hand, however, it is not possible for the golfer to lift his left foot during the swinging movement and to turn it into the swinging plane in the same was as his right foot, as the player would then loose his hold under the momentum of the movement, and would fall over forwards. 
     The situation is absolutely different when a sports shoe according to the invention is used: While the spikes of a sports shoe according to the invention will likewise dig into the ground, the shoe still has the capability to turn from the starting position about a limited angle into the targeted direction because the spikes are guided along an arc of a circle, preferably due to the fact that the spikes are provided on one or more movable supports that are guided and held by guide means that either have the shape of, or guide the spikes along, an arc of a circle. Consequently, the shoe is capable of rotating correspondingly relative to the spikes while the latter remain anchored in the ground. The turning movement of the left shoe occurs without the golfer&#39;s stability being endangered, as the spikes of the left shoe remain stuck in the ground during the turning movement provoked by the swinging movement. 
     The invention offers important advantages:
         Torsion of the body, the waist, the knee and ankle joints during the swinging movement is reduced. Even if the torsion angle is reduced by a few degrees only, this already brings great relief and alleviation to the player, as in the case of conventional golf shoes the turning movement gets ever harder as the turning angle increases and because the last degrees of the turning movement are the hardest and the most straining for the body and mark, or even exceed the upper limits of what many players can stand. A little less torsion therefore already means that the player&#39;s ligaments are no longer overstretched by the turning movement and that his joints are no longer overstrained.   The risk of injury is greatly reduced, especially in the region of the spinal column and in the region of the ankle and knee joints. The risk of luxation, or even of a prolapse of a disk, is considerably reduced.   The player&#39;s stability is increased in the final phase of the swinging movement as the golfer&#39;s weight is shifted from its outer edge to the forefoot during the turning movement of the shoe. The forefoot is that part of the foot by which a swinging movement can be balanced out most easily and safely.   Playing golf is rendered less tiring and strenuous.   Surprisingly, a considerable increase in precision is observed in the driving of golf balls. Although this result is unexpected, it is of course highly desirable as it improves the golfer&#39;s proficiency and, thus, his joy in playing.       

     The spikes may be guided individually in undercut, arc-shaped grooves. Preferably, they are provided on an arc-shaped, sliding support. In principle, it would be sufficient to provide the spikes on a single support, conveniently in the forefoot area of the sole. If a single support is provided only, then an embodiment should be preferred which is wide enough to accommodate a plurality of spikes or other ground-engaging elements one beside the other and one behind the other. In the heel area, spikes are of advantage, but not absolutely necessary for purposes of the invention. Preferably, however, the heel area is likewise provided with one or two supports that coact with one or more supports in the region of the forefoot and whose guide means have a common center of curvature so that the foot can turn about a defined center of rotation. This does not, however, mean that the position of the centers of curvature, about which the different supports turn, may not be spaced a little one relative to the other: It only means that the centers of curvature may not be spaced one from the other so far that the shoe will loose its capability to perform a turning movement. It must be considered in this connection that the spikes are not fixed in the ground immovably, the ground (especially in the case of turf) being a little resilient. 
     Just as in the case of conventional golf shoes, steel spikes, ceramic spikes or soft spikes may be employed; the spikes can be firmly connected with the supports, or may be exchangeable. The invention is not subject to any limitation in this respect. Instead of spikes, other ground-engaging elements may also be used, for example plastic projections formed integrally with the support, which improve the walking safety and stability in the same way as spikes. 
     Preferably, the spikes or the support can be moved forward and backward between a starting position and an end position. The spikes or the support, and its guide means, then remain in mutual engagement over the full length of the movement. For less demanding applications, for example for training purposes, one can, however, do without a defined starting position and a defined end position relative to the sole of the sports shoe. If in any such case the support should slide out of its guide means as a result of the impetus of the swinging movement, it will then have to be replaced in the guide means before the next swinging movement can be performed. The fact that the support is permitted to slide off its guide means may, however, offer advantages for training purposes because the spikes, dug into the ground, will in this case keep the supports in the respective position and, thus, mark the starting position of the feet for the next swinging movement. 
     In normal playing operation, it will be preferred, however, it the support is held in the shoe by the guide means undetachably. 
     If the sports shoe is designed to allow the respective support to slide a certain length out of its guide means, then a stop is preferably provided between the support and the guide means in order to limit the distance by which the support is allowed to slide off its guide means. Such a stop may be realized, for example, by providing both the guide means and the respective support with a shoulder, which shoulders then come to abut one against the other when the support slides off its guide means. 
     After having been displaced as a result of a swinging movement, the supports must be moved back to their starting position. This may be effected by the athlete turning his foot in the opposite direction before he lifts his foot to withdraw the spikes from the ground. A more comfortable possibility is achieved when each guide means is equipped with a return spring which automatically returns the support to its starting position. Such return spring may be configured, for example, as a helical spring or a pneumatic spring. 
     Preferably, the respective support is shorter than the guide means in which it is received. This is a precondition for the sliding capability of the system in cases where the guide means is closed on both ends. In cases where the guide means is open on one of its ends, that further development is convenient if a return spring is provided, though that further development is not compulsory if a return spring is to be provided, because the return spring might as well be accommodated inside the support. The return spring could have one of its ends anchored on that end of the guide means which abuts against the support in its starting position, while its other end could be anchored on the opposite end of the support, in which case the entire length of the guide means would be available for displacement of the support. 
     It is preferred if the supports do not leave the guide means or the sole completely in the course of the turning movement. Instead, they should remain securely held in or on their guide means, in which they are slidingly engaged, even in the bent-over position of the ankle. This is most conveniently achieved by providing a positive fit between the guide means and the support, especially by giving guide means the form of grooves which are undercut on both sides and which are positively engaged by a slide of complementary shape that serves as support for the spikes. Groove-and-tongue connections, especially dovetail connections, are especially well suited. 
     Preferably, the supports are allowed to slide off their guide means only on one side, while a stop prevents them from sliding off in the other direction. 
     Preferably, a stop is used to secure the supports from sliding completely off the guide means or the sole. Returning the support into the guide means or the sole may be effected by the user pushing the support back using his other foot. Preferably, however, a return spring is provided, especially a pneumatic spring. 
     In the case of a shoe in which the supports are permitted to slide off the guide means on one of its sides, it should be possible to return or push back the supports far enough to ensure that they will not project beyond the lateral edge of the sole. Preferably, the supports end flush with the lateral edge of the sole, beyond which they are allowed to slide, in their starting position. 
     The direction in which the supports slide during rotation of the body, is preferably different in the area of the heel as compared with the area of the forefoot. The common center of curvature should be positioned between the heel of the shoe and its forefoot. Preferably, it should be located approximately at the point where the zenith of the plantar surface of the foot is found. 
     The supports may be made from metal or from a plastic material. Preferably, they are made from a plastic material having similar properties as the plastic material used for the sole of the shoe. The supports then have a plasticity adapted to the plasticity of the remaining sole, especially as regards their flexibility. This is favorable with respect to the walking comfort and does not impair the function of the support, especially if the latter is designed as a slide and if the guide means consist of a groove in the sole in which the slide is received. 
     If the guide means consists of a groove in the sole and the support consists of a slide, which is received and held in the groove, this provides the advantage that the invention is integrated in the sole of the sports shoe in such a way that its dimensional effects are particularly small and walking feels the same as with any conventional sports shoe. There is, however, also the possibility to provide arc-shaped rails or brackets on the sole or in grooves, slots or similar recesses in the sole, which have their ends anchored on or, preferably, in the sole, and to provide that the supports for the spikes, which may also have the contour of an arc of a circle, slide on those rails or brackets. 
     In case grooves are selected as guide means for the swinging movement of the slides, such grooves may be closed on both ends. This provides the advantage that the arrangement of the slides is well protected and secure from crushing. There is, however, also the possibility to make the grooves open on one of their ends so that the respective slide is allowed to move out of its groove a certain length. This offers the advantage that the shoe is allowed to turn over a larger angle under the action of the swinging movement than would be possible if the grooves were closed on both ends. Depending on the configuration and arrangement of the slides, the angle may be in the range of up to 30 degrees, or even a little more in the case of telescoping slides. But even the smaller angles possible with grooves that are closed on both ends already bring a considerable relief for the athlete. 
     According to another preferred embodiment of the invention, the supports for the spikes are mounted on the sports shoe detachably. This allows the sports shoe to be selectively used with or without the equipment according to the invention. For example, it is then possible to mount the movable supports, with their spikes, on the golf show when the golfer wishes to practice the teeing-off movement many times on the driving range—an exercise which otherwise, if the golfer were to wear a conventional golf shoe, would heavily strain his ligaments and joints, which strain can be mitigated if the equipment according to the invention is mounted on the sports shoe. For a tournament, however, the equipment according to the invention could be removed from the sports shoe. Considering that the support, being guided by the guide means, moves along an arc of a circle, the axis of such movement can be configured as a physical axis of rotation of the support. Such a physical axis of rotation is well suited as guide means, or as guide means component for the support. The support may then be mounted on the sole of the sports shoe at such physical axis of rotation, or by means of such physical axis of rotation. For example, it is then possible to configure the support as a plate, which is fastened on the bottom surface of the sole by a threaded bolt acting as such axis. The threaded bolt may be screwed into a threaded bush which is embedded in the sole, especially in the metatarsal region. Other guide means, for example in the form an undercut groove or a bracket, may be arranged on the sole in the area of the tip of the shoe, for receiving and guiding a forward edge of the support, and may be arranged on the sole in the area of the heel for receiving and guiding a rear end of the support. 
     According to another possibility, the supports and the associated guide means may be arranged on a holder which latter may be detachably mounted on the sports shoe, especially on the latter&#39;s sole. The holder may comprise for this purpose one or more clamping means, by means of which it can be mounted on the sports shoe, for example by means of clamping jaws adapted to clamp the sole between them from the side. Another possibility of mounting the holder on the sports shoe consists in fastening it on the sports shoe by buckles. Still another possibility of mounting the holder consists in providing the holder with receiving means on which the sports shoe can be placed and can then be firmly locked be pressing it down in a way comparable, for example, with a ski binding, where the shoe is placed in the binding from above, is then pressed down and thereby locked in the binding. 
     If the support is of the detachable type it is of advantage to arrange the return spring so that it embraces the center point about which the support rotates. 
     A sports shoe according to the invention may be used not only for golfing, but also for other types of sports where swinging movements are performed and have to be balanced out, as is the case, for example, with baseball, tennis, field hockey and football. Football shoes have studs that offer resistance to rotating movements of the football player, which in view of the extreme use football players have to make of their body causes high strain to their knee joints and ankles. If the studs are mounted on the football shoes in the way proposed by this invention, so that they can move to and fro along an arc-shaped path, then strain acting on the joints is reduced and ruptures of the crucial ligaments, which are a typical result of overstraining through rotary movements, are prevented. 
     The sports shoe may be provided in this case with advantage with a spring-loaded release mechanism provided with a triggering level for the arc-shaped movement of the studs or of the other engaging elements. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES 
       Certain embodiments are illustrated in the attached drawings in which: 
         FIG. 1  shows the sole of a sports shoe according to the invention; 
         FIG. 2  shows a section along line A-A through the sole of the shoe illustrated in  FIG. 1 ; 
         FIG. 3  shows a section along line B-B through the sole of the shoe illustrated in  FIG. 1 ; 
         FIG. 4  shows a modified embodiment of a sports shoe in a representation similar to that of  FIG. 1 ; 
         FIG. 5  shows a section, corresponding to  FIG. 2 , through a sole with a return spring; 
         FIG. 6  shows a horizontal section along line C-C in  FIG. 4 ; and 
         FIG. 7  shows a further embodiment of a sports shoe in a representation similar to that of  FIG. 1 ; and 
         FIG. 8  shows a further embodiment of a sports shoe in a representation similar to that of  FIG. 7 . 
     
    
    
     Identical elements, or elements corresponding one to the other, are designated by the same reference numerals in the drawings. 
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     The sports shoe illustrated in  FIG. 1 to 3  comprises a sole  1  provided with guide means consisting of four arc-shaped grooves  2  to  5  in the region of the forefoot and two further arc-shaped grooves  6  and  7  in the region of the heel, which grooves are arranged concentrically one relative to the other and whose center points M, M 5 , M 6  lie between the forefoot region and the region of the heel and partly coincide one with the other. Each of the grooves  2  to  7  accommodates a slide  12  to  17 , which serves as support and which is a little shorter than the respective groove. The foremost slide  12  carries a spike  9 , each of the remaining slides  13  to  17  carries two spikes  9 , the spikes being all arranged near the ends of the slides  13  to  17 . The spikes  9  are received in threaded bushes  10  embedded in the slides  12  to  17 , and are screwed into the bush by a threaded extension  11 . 
     The slides  12  to  17  are held in the grooves  2  to  7  displaceably, but undetachably, being connected with the grooves in the way of a groove-and-tongue connection, as illustrated in  FIG. 2 . 
     The slides  12  to  17  have a starting position and an end position in the grooves  2  to  7 .  FIG. 1  shows the end position. In their starting position, they can abut against the opposite end of the groove, in certain cases against a return spring provided before the end of the grooves  2  to  7 . The path of movement of the slides  12  to  17  between their starting position and their end position defines the angle over which the sports shoe can follow the swinging movement of a person&#39;s body. In one embodiment, illustrated in  FIG. 4 , that path of movement may be longer than in the embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 1 . 
     In the case of the embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 4 , the grooves  2  to  7  are not closed on both ends but only on one end. The grooves  2  to  7  extend to the edge of the sole  1 , namely in the region of the forefoot to the ends on the inner side of the foot, and in the region of the heel to the edge on the outer side of the foot. In their starting position, the slides  12  to  15  end flush with the inner edge of the sole  1 , while the two slides  16  and  17  in the region of the heel end flush with the outer edge of the heel in their starting position. When the body performs a swinging movement, the slides  12  to  17  can slide a certain length off the sole  1 . They can then be returned to their starting position by pushing them back using the other foot. Alternatively, they may be returned by a return spring  19 , an example of which is illustrated in  FIGS. 5 and 6 . 
     The upper surface of the slide  14  is provided with an arc-shaped groove  18 , which is closed toward the walking surface of the sole  1 , but open toward the base of the groove  4 , and which receives a return spring  19  in the form of a helical spring that has its two ends fixed on a steel cable  20 ,  21 . A plate  22  on which the one end of the cable  21  is fixed is fastened to that end of the slide  14  that can move out of the groove  4 . A plate  23  to which one end of the other steel cable  20  is fixed is fastened to the opposite end of the groove  4 . Given the fact that the return spring  19  does not extend over the full length of the slide  14 , it is well protected from soiling. The return spring is tensioned when the slide  14  moves out of its groove  4  as a result of a swinging movement performed by the user&#39;s body, and automatically returns the slide  14  into the groove  4  when the shoe is lifted by the user. 
     Another groove  26 , extending in the slide  16  concentrically to the arc-shaped groove  18  and beside the latter, is open on its one end and closed on its other end, thereby forming a stop  25  which finally abuts against a stop  24  when the slide  16  is pushed out of the groove  6 , the stop  24  being formed by a nose projecting from the sole into the groove  6 . 
     In the embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 7 , a holder  27  is mounted rotatably on the bottom surface of the sole  1 . This is achieved by a threaded bush embedded in the sole, in the region between the metatarsus and the heel, with a threaded bolt  28  fitted in the bush which secures the holder  27  to the sole  1  with the aid of a washer  29  so that the holder can be rotated about the threaded bolt  28 . The holder  27  comprises two arms  27   a ,  27   b  extending in the longitudinal direction of the sole  1  and carrying cross pieces  30 ,  31 ,  32  and  33  on which spikes  9  are mounted. The forward end of the arm  27   b  reaches below a bracket  34  whose ends  35  are embedded in the sole  1 . The forward end of the holder  27  is guided between the sole  1  and the bracket  34 . In the region of the heel, the two ends of the cross piece  33  engage recesses  36 , which are provided in the sole  1  and are covered by a covering plate  37  fastened on the sole  1 ; in the illustration of  FIG. 7 , the covering plate has been broken away in the area above one of the recesses  36 , and has been completely removed from the other recess  36 , in order to show the return spring  19  located underneath which acts on that end of the cross piece  33  that engages the recess  36 . Irrespective of the direction in which the support  27  is rotated when a swinging movement of the user&#39;s body occurs, one of the two return springs  19  will be compressed and will thus be capable of returning the holder  27  to its starting position when the foot is lifted. 
     The illustrated shoes are especially well suited for use as golf shoes. It is not necessary that both shoes of one pair of golf shoes be designed according to the invention. For a left-handed person it will be sufficient if the right shoe is designed according to the invention, while for a right-handed person it will be sufficient if the left shoe is designed according to the invention. 
     The embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 8  differs from the embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 7  insofar that the arm  27   a  of the holder  27 , which is seated for rotation about a bolt  28 , transitions in the area of the heel to a plate-shaped support  38  and that the arm  27   b  of the holder  27  transitions to a plate-shaped support  39  located in the area of the metatarsus and the forefoot. The rear end of the rear support  38  and the front end of the front support  39  each engage a guide slot provided between the heel of the sports shoe and a bracket  40  fastened on the heel, or in the area of the forefoot between the sole and a bracket  41  fastened on the sole of the sports shoe. The two brackets  40  and  41  may be formed from sheet metal or a plastic material, for example. The brackets  40  and  41  may, but need not, be provided with a stop limiting the pivotal movement of the holder  27 . The bolt  28 , which is configured as a threaded bolt, is surrounded by a strong spiral spring  42  which has its inner end fixed on the bolt  28 , or on a sleeve anchored on the sole and receiving the bolt, and has its outer end fixed on a mounting element  43 , which is provided on the holder  27  and is configured as a pin directed against the sole, for example. The arrangement of the spiral spring is such that the holders are held in their central position, as shown in  FIG. 8 , when the spiral spring does not exert any restoring forces. When the holder moves out of its central position, in clockwise or counterclockwise direction, the spiral spring  42  produces a restoring force that tends to drive the holder back to its central position. The plate-shaped carriers  38  and  39  carry engaging elements  9 , which may take the form of spikes if the sports shoe is to be used as golf shoe, or which may take the form of studs if the sports shoe is a football shoe.