A quite good paper that has gone ignored, although it is in an obscure location.
The best conclusion of the analysis is that it is not possible to accurately restore the top speeds of potentially fast running extinct exotic animals.
We can without simulations predict the speed of an extinct gracile ungulate being around and about the speed of similar ungulates of today.
Anything that has rectigrade elephantine limbs that have short nearly immobile hindfeet like sauropods, stegosaurs, unitatheres are going to be about as fast as elephants, which in timed races can do a walk-run amble without a suspended phase of about 15 mph. That includes the juveniles, watch the John Wayne flick Hatari!
The fatal defect of trying to use biomechanics to estimate top speeds is that one is simulating a simulation, not observing the actual animal. The latter being the only way to see what the top speed really is or was. Simulations have to make assumptions that may not match the reality of the animal, which is a product of evolutionary selective factors that may have allowed it to exceed human expectations and calculations.
I could not convince Paul McCready, who developed the first successful human powered aircraft, that Quetz could fly at over 70 kg. Now we know those things weighed 100s of kilograms.
Who would via simulations estimate that some marine mammals could dive thousands of feet if they were all extinct? After all, mammals are high metabolic rate beasts that have to surface frequently to get all that oxygen they need.
There is that vid a paleo has posted showing three big white rhinos trotting along, one trips and does an aerial flip that would back a gymnast proud, and gets up and trots along. So much for all those nonsensical calculations that Tyrannosaurus would break its bones if it ran too fast.
If an animal had flexed limbs with a long foot on a mobile ankle that it could push off with into a suspended phase it could fast run. How fast, who knows. We do know that arch predators are animal athletes built for speed. We know that the giant avepods were built like running birds and mammals, not elephants. They may have had a lot of white fibers in their leg muscles, including that big honking caudofemoralis, to produce intense ambush burst speed. So trying to outrun one probably not the best idea even if a top Olympic athlete. Giant ceratopsids and hadrosaurs should have been in the rhino speed range (again, see Hatari for the best full galloping rhino sequences ever taken, they are online) --
http://www.gspauldino.com/Forelimb.pdf;
http://www.gspauldino.com/GaiaNeoceratopsian.pdf). Ceratopsids seem adapted for short burst charges.
GSPaul