The Salomon Sense Ride 5 (₹13,999) and the La Sportiva Bushido 3 (₹14,999) are both trail shoes, both unplated, and within 5g of each other on the scale. The similarity ends there. The Sense Ride 5 has a 32mm heel stack; the Bushido 3 has 22mm. That is a 10mm difference in cushioning, and it is the single most important number on either spec sheet. This review works through the published specifications, the demands these shoes are designed for, and the case for choosing one over the other for an Indian trail runner in 2026.
The verified specifications
The manufacturer specifications for the 2026 India release. Nothing has been extrapolated; what is not listed here is not in the comparison.
| Spec | Salomon Sense Ride 5 | La Sportiva Bushido 3 |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Trail running shoe | Trail running shoe |
| Drop (mm) | 8 | 6 |
| Heel stack (mm) | 32 | 22 |
| Forefoot stack (mm) | 24 | 16 |
| Weight (g, US 9) | 285 | 290 |
| Foam | Energy Surge foam | MEMlex EVA |
| Plate | None | None |
| Best for | Long-distance trail | Technical trail / Skyrace |
| India price | ₹13,999 | ₹14,999 |
The category labels are the headline. Salomon positions the Sense Ride 5 as a long-distance trail shoe. La Sportiva positions the Bushido 3 as a technical / Skyrace shoe. Those are honest descriptions, and they map directly to the stack-height difference. A 32mm heel and a 24mm forefoot is a daily-distance platform. A 22mm heel and a 16mm forefoot is a low-to-the-ground race platform. The two shoes are answering different questions, and the buyer's first job is to identify which question they are asking.
What the literature says about stack height on trail
A 2023 review in the European Journal of Sport Science on midsole stack height and proprioception found that lower-stack shoes (under 25mm forefoot) preserve more ankle-joint position sense than higher-stack platforms, with measurable differences on uneven surfaces. The same review noted that the trade-off is metabolic: higher-stack shoes reduce the cumulative impact load on muscle and connective tissue across long distances, particularly past 90 minutes of running.
The Bushido 3 sits at the lower end of the trail-shoe stack range. The Sense Ride 5 sits at the upper end. Neither position is universally correct. The published evidence supports matching stack to terrain and to distance, not to a single optimum.
What this means for India
Indian trails are heterogeneous. The Sahyadri high country, the Nilgiris, the Aravalli ridges, and the lower Himalaya all present technical terrain — rocks, scree, exposed roots, narrow single-track. Other Indian trail venues — coastal Karnataka, fire roads around Coorg, the runnable tracks of Bandipur or Kanha — are smoother and reward higher stack for distance. The Bushido 3's geometry is optimised for the first kind of terrain. The Sense Ride 5's geometry is optimised for the second.
Foam, ride characteristics, and what they imply
Salomon's Energy Surge foam is a TPU-EVA blend introduced for the brand's mid-tier daily trail line. La Sportiva's MEMlex EVA is a closed-cell EVA compound used across the Bushido line for several generations.
The peer-reviewed literature on these specific compounds is limited. The Cigoja 2023 review in Sports Medicine on running shoe foams provided general guidance: TPU-blend foams retain rebound properties across temperature and use range more consistently than pure EVA, while EVA compounds tend to feel firmer and more responsive on irregular surfaces at the cost of compression set over time. The implication, applied to these two shoes, is that the Sense Ride 5 will feel more cushioned and more consistent across long distances, while the Bushido 3 will feel firmer, more reactive on technical inputs, and more connected to the ground.
The Energy Surge foam in the Sense Ride 5 also supports the shoe's positioning as a long-distance option. The Bushido 3's MEMlex EVA reinforces its position as a Skyrace tool — fast, precise, unforgiving past a certain distance.
Grip, outsole, and Indian terrain
Salomon's All Terrain Contagrip on the Sense Ride 5 is a generalist outsole compound with multi-directional 4-5mm lugs. La Sportiva's FriXion XT rubber on the Bushido 3 uses sticky-rubber chemistry and aggressive 4mm lugs designed for sharp inputs on rock and scree.
On Indian terrain, the relevant comparison is monsoon performance and dry-rock performance, which behave differently.
Monsoon and wet conditions
Both outsoles handle wet conditions reasonably. The Sense Ride 5's Contagrip is more versatile across mud, wet roots, and fire road. The Bushido 3's FriXion XT excels specifically on wet rock and dry technical descents but is less forgiving on slick mud and loose dirt. For monsoon training in Maharashtra or Karnataka where rain hits forest trails, the Sense Ride 5 is the more general-purpose choice.
Dry technical and Skyrace conditions
On the rocky technical sections of a race like the Malnad Ultra, the Hampi 100, or the Aravalli Trail Series, the Bushido 3's grip on dry rock is in a different class. The sticky-rubber chemistry holds where standard trail outsoles slip. This is the use case the shoe was designed for, and the published manufacturer data is consistent with what runners report on European Skyrace courses.
Distance capacity and the body-weight question
The Sense Ride 5's 32mm heel and 24mm forefoot provide enough cushioning for trail half marathons, 50km races, and most 80km ultras on mixed terrain. The 8mm drop is conventional and accommodates heel-strikers and midfoot-strikers without adaptation.
The Bushido 3's 22/16mm stack is, by current trail-shoe standards, low. The 6mm drop is moderate. The shoe is designed for races of typically 10-50km on technical terrain where speed and ground feel matter more than long-distance comfort. Past 50km on rocky terrain, the cumulative impact load on the forefoot is meaningful, and the published research on stack height and cushioning supports caution at higher mileage in this geometry.
Body weight is the other variable. The cushioning research suggests that for runners above 75kg, a forefoot stack below 20mm offers limited protection over long distances. The Bushido 3 is more defensible for runners under 70kg on technical terrain; the Sense Ride 5 is the more general-purpose choice across body weights.
Implications for an Indian buyer
If you weigh under 65kg, race short to mid-distance trail, and train mostly on technical terrain in the Sahyadris or the Aravallis, the Bushido 3's geometry is defensible. For everyone else — heavier runners, ultra-distance racers, mixed-terrain trainers, or those running through monsoon — the Sense Ride 5 is the broader-utility choice.
Price, availability, and value-per-feature in India
The Sense Ride 5 at ₹13,999 and the Bushido 3 at ₹14,999 sit ₹1,000 apart. Both are imported, and Indian retail distribution is concentrated in specialty trail-running stores and the brands' official channels.
Salomon's Indian distribution is the larger of the two. Sense Ride 5 stock is available through the brand's official India site, Adventure Sports in Bengaluru, and a handful of authorised running specialty stores. The wider Salomon range is also visible at /compare/shoes/salomon/.
La Sportiva's Indian presence is smaller. The Bushido 3 is sold through La Sportiva's India site, occasional stock at climbing and mountaineering specialty stores, and import-forward retailers. The broader catalogue is at /compare/shoes/la-sportiva/. Verify availability in your size before purchase; La Sportiva's distribution irregularities mean that out-of-stock runs are common, particularly in sizes outside UK 8-10.
The published reviews suggest a functional lifespan of 600-800 km for both shoes on Indian terrain, with the Bushido's outsole rubber holding up marginally longer on rock and the Sense Ride 5's foam holding up marginally longer at high mileage. The cost-per-kilometre maths favours the Sense Ride 5 by a small but real margin.
Full spec breakdowns are on the Sense Ride 5 review and the Bushido 3 review. The broader comparison hub is at /compare/shoes/.
The verdict, by use case
For technical Skyrace and steep mountain races under 50km, on dry rocky terrain, for runners under 70kg: the Bushido 3 is the defensible choice. The geometry, the foam, and the FriXion XT rubber are designed for this use case and the engineering supports it.
For long-distance trail running, ultras above 50km, mixed terrain training, monsoon conditions, runners above 70kg, or anyone wanting a single trail shoe across most use cases: the Sense Ride 5 is the broader-utility choice. The cushioning, the more conventional 8mm drop, and the more versatile outsole map to a wider range of conditions.
For a first trail shoe with no prior trail experience: the Sense Ride 5. The 8mm drop is more familiar for road runners, the cushioning is more forgiving of pacing errors, and the outsole is more general-purpose.
Once the shoe is selected, the training around it determines whether the investment returns value. Use the STRIDD plan generator to build a structured trail-running week, and browse the wider Running Lab for evidence-based trail-training reads. The shoe is a tool. The plan is the work.