
Despite being a staple on the roads Nike has been quiet in the trail running scene the last few years, but its current line has a solid performer in the Zoom Wildhorse.
I ran about 75 miles on varied trails in Oregon, Arizona, and Illinois, and the Wildhorse ($110) was a pleasant combination of comfort, durability, and responsiveness.
The Wildhorse is also available in a Gore-Tex waterproof version, the GTX.

What The Wildhorse Does Right
Outsole
The Wildhorse lugs are pretty much the “Goldilocks porridge” of trail lugs, not too intense and not too subtle — just right. The forefoot has a grid pattern of rectangle lugs that provide a firm grip when climbing and descending, but not catchy to prevent torquing ankles on roots or rocks.
The heel has reverse-oriented lugs down the middle for traction on descents. The outside edges have very low-profile tread to prevent the aforementioned ankle wrenching. With fairly shallow lugs throughout, the Wildhorse feels comfortable on the roads, too.
A 4mm drop (23-19mm heel-to-toe) is nearly flat and close to the ground. The Wildhorses definitely felt nimble on technical terrain. A compression-molded midsole provides cushioning, resulting in a soft but fairly stable ride.
Upper
The Wildhorse uses the Nike Free foot shape mold, and it cradled my foot comfortably without any sliding or hotspots. The gusseted tongue prevents small debris from working into the shoe and the tongue length was short enough to prevent becoming a gravel funnel.
