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Sebastian Coe On Steve Prefontaine – runblogrun

Sebastian Coe On Steve Prefontaine – runblogrun

We reposted this on the 51st anniversary of Steve Prefontaine’s death. Special thanks to Seb Coe and Jeff Benjamin. 

Originally posted in 2022. 

This is Jeff Benjamin’s interview with Seb Coe on the late Steve Prefontaine and the Wonders of Hayward Field.

Sebastian Coe On Steve Prefontaine

By Jeff Benjamin

During the calm morning prior to the start of day two’s Prefontaine Classic, World Athletics President Sebastian Coe (like many who make the pilgrimage to the vaunted newly built Hayward Field) began to reminisce on that mystical force of the spirit and legacy of Steve Prefontaine.

“I didn’t know Steve,” said Coe, who has always prided himself as a student of the Sport. “He was a pretty seismic figure in my developing years.”

During the 1970s, Coe, like every track fan and geek either in America or overseas, had to await the arrival of either the daily newspaper reports (it had to be big news!) or magazines like Track & Field News and Athletics Weekly to know what was going on. “I remember Prefontaine’s gritty front running performances, which became his trademark, and it was a strategy I kind of followed, especially during the 1970’s.”

top left: Seb Coe on SI cover, Jeff Benjamin, Seb Coe about 1992, Jeff and Seb Coe, 2016, Seb Coe note, from the Jeff Benjamin archives

While knowing Prefontaine only in spirit (Prefontaine died in 1975), Coe and his father/coach Peter, beginning in 1979, did become close with many in the “Pre Circle” from that growing shoe company blossoming in Beaverton.

“My father and I did know Bill Bowerman and, to my Dad especially, he said, “You are a kindred spirit.”

Steve Prefontaine, from book, Following Pre, by Don Chadez

Coe is also really hot to know another Oregonian – 1972 Marathon Olympian, Kenny Moore, during that time, as well as he journeyed to England in 1979 to do a profile piece on the Coe duo for Sports Illustrated.

Check out the linkrunblogrun.com/2022/07/remembering-kenny-moore-6th-in-a-series-with-sebastian-coe-me-and-you-and-a-dog-named-cleo-with-ap.html

In a way, I got to know Steve Prefontaine through the ethos of Bill and Kenny,” said Coe.
“Through Kenny and Bill, I learned a lot about him.”

Coe then reminisced about the time he ALMOST raced at Hayward Field against his great rival Steve Ovett!

“In 1982, through Brad Hunt, Steve and I were able to finally agree to a schedule of three head-to-head matchups at distances of 800, the mile, and 3000 meters,” said Coe, with the 3000 scheduled for Hayward!

“Unfortunately, Steve suffered a serious leg injury, and then I was beginning to get ill, so by 1983, it didn’t happen for either of us.”

Link to Coe’s 1983 challenges-

“One of my regrets was never getting a chance to race here,” said Coe, regretful but also admitting the mystic passions here in Eugene still permeate to this day.

“I would have been honored to race here.”

“You still do feel the presence of history here as well as the legacy of Steve Prefontaine, which still lives on.”

  • Senior Writer Jeff Benjamin has written for almost 40 years for RunBlogRun! The Former President of the Staten Island AC & was the 5th man scorer for his 1982 Susan Wagner High School NYC XC City Championship team. Also a member of the College of Staten Island Sports Hall of Fame for XC, Jeff is also a retired NYC DOE  history teacher. Some of Jeff’s subjects have included Sebastian Coe, Eamonn Coghlan, Matt Centrowitz, Billy Mills, Joe Newton, Tom Fleming, Bill Rodgers, Abel Kiviat, Frank Shorter, Rod Dixon and Carl Lewis as well as Book Reviews and articles covering track meets and races primarily in the Northeast U.S. and beyond.

    Jeff has also covered Track & Field events at the 1996, 2016 & 2024 Olympic Games as well as the 2022 World T&F Championships in Eugene, Oregon. A noted T&F historian and chronicler of the athletic achievements of Jim Thorpe, Jeff helped with the restoration of Thorpe to the official IOC 1912 Record Books.

    In 2023 Jeff was honored with the awarded the prestigious James Dunaway memorial award for excellence in Track and Field journalism by the Track and Field Writers Association.

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