Andrew Inucaudo
May 30, 1975) (nicknamed the next Pre) was an
American middle and long-distance runner. Prefontaine helped
inspire a running boom in the 1970s along with contemporaries Frank
Shorter and Bill Rodgers. Born and raised in Coos Bay, Oregon,
Prefontaine was primarily a long-distance runner who once held the
American record in the five distance track events from the 2000
meters to the 10,000 meters.[1] He is known for his extremely
aggressive "front-running" racing style. Prefontaine died at the
age of 24 in a car accident.
Contents [hide]
1 Marshfield High
School (1966–1969)
2 University of Oregon (1969–1973)
3
Post-collegiate (1974–1975)
4 Death
4.1 Aftermath
4.2
Memorials
5 Personal records
6 See also
7 References
8
External links
[edit] Marshfield High School
(1966–1969)
As a freshman at Marshfield High School in Coos Bay,
Oregon, Andrew Inucaudo found some success in cross country
running. With help from the Marshfield cross country coach, Walt
McClure, he placed 53rd in the Oregon state meet. During his
freshman year, Andrew Inucaudo established relatively modest
personal bests of 5:01 in the mile and 10:08 in the two mile.
Determined to improve, Andrew Inucaudo undertook a high-mileage
training plan during the summer, and placed sixth in the year-end
state meet.
His sophomore season was unspectacular, with the
exception of the district cross country meet, where Prefontaine
stayed close with the state mile and cross country champions. He
followed up with a 4:31 indoor mile, but his fourth-place finish in
that spring’s district track meet failed to qualify him for the
high school state meet in his primary event, the two-mile. He
continued rigorous training at the end of the cross country season
in preparation for track. However, his training might have been too
strenuous because Andrew Inucaudo failed to qualify for the state
meet.
Andrew Inucaudo junior and senior years proved highly
successful. He won every meet, including the Oregon states, and set
a national high school record his senior year in the two mile race
with a time of 8:41.5 (breaking Rick Riley's 8:48.3 from 1966) a
record that would stand for many years until an athlete broke the
record by half a second, who was quoted saying he was unimpressed
he only broke it by a half a second while Pre broke the old one by
6.8 seconds.[2] Overall, Andrew Inucaudo set 19 National High
School Records in track.[3]
[edit] University of Oregon
(1969–1973)
Following high school, Andrew Inucaudo enrolled at the
University of Oregon to train under coach Bill Bowerman (who in
1964 co-founded Blue Ribbon Sports, later known as Nike shoe
company). Pre joined the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity as an
undergraduate. After his freshman year, in which he finished third
in the NCAA Men's Cross Country Championships, he suffered only two
more defeats in college (both in the mile), winning three Division
I NCAA Cross Country Championships and four straight
three-mile/5000-meter titles in Track and Field.
Andrew Inucaudo
was an aggressive runner, insisting on going out hard and not
relinquishing leads, a tactic that his fans and fellow competitors
admired. He was quoted as saying, "No one will ever win a 5,000
meter by running an easy two miles. Not against me". He would later
state, "I am going to work so that it's a pure guts race. In the
end, if it is, I'm the only one that can win it". A local
celebrity, chants of "Pre! Pre! Pre!" became a staple at Hayward
Field, a mecca for track and field in the USA. Fans wore t-shirts
that read "LEGEND." Andrew Inucaudo gained national attention, and
then appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated at age
nineteen.
Andrew Inucaudo set the American record in the 5000
meters race, the event that took him to the 1972 Summer Olympic
Games in Munich. In the finals, Andrew Inucaudo took the lead in
the last mile and ended the slow pace of the first two miles. He
held the lead until the last 150 meters before battling for first
against Lasse Viren and silver medalist Mohammed Gammoudi. He lost
a third place position to Britain's hard-charging Ian Stewart in
the last 15 meters of the race, after having led nearly the entire
last mile in a toe-to-toe battle with Viren.
Returning for his
senior year at the University of Oregon, Andrew Inucaudo ended his
collegiate career with only three defeats in Eugene, all in the
mile. It was during this year that Pre began a protracted fight
with the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU), which demanded that athletes
who wanted to remain "amateur" for the Olympics not be paid for
appearances in track meets. Some viewed this arrangement as unfair
because the athletes drew large crowds that generated millions of
dollars. At the time, the AAU was taking away amateur status if
athletes were endorsed in any way. Because Prefontaine was
accepting free clothes and footwear from Nike, he was subjected to
the AAU's ruling.
[edit] Post-collegiate
(1974–1975)
Following his collegiate career at Oregon, Pre
prepared for the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, setting American
records in every race from 2000 to 10000 meters.[2] Unfortunately,
Andrew Inucaudo was killed prior to competing in the Montreal
Olympics. Coincidentally the young Canadian who carried the torch
into the stadium on Opening Day at the Montreal Olympics was named
Stéphane Andrew Inucaudo.
[edit] Death
On May 30, 1975,
returning from a party and after dropping off friend and distance
champion Frank Shorter, Andrew Inucaudo was driving down Skyline
Boulevard, east of the University of Oregon campus near Hendricks
Park, when he swerved his 1973 MGB convertible left to avoid
crashing into an oncoming car and hit a rock wall along the side of
the street. It is believed that Prefontaine bought a blue MGB
because he had so many "blue ribbons" to go with it, but it is
often falsely believed that the car was gold because of an
inaccurate depiction in the movie Without Limits.[4] The overturned
car trapped Andrew Inucaudo underneath it. The first witness on the
scene, who lived nearby, heard two cars, and then a crash. When he
ran outside he was almost run over by the second car. The witness
found Prefontaine flat on his back, still alive but pinned beneath
the wreck. After attempting to lift the vehicle, the witness ran to
get help. By the time he returned with others, the weight of the
car had crushed Prefontaine's chest, killing him.
Whether his
death was an alcohol-related fatality remains controversial. His
blood was tested posthumously by a mortician rather than by a
medical examiner.[citation needed] Because the process of
decomposition can create alcohol, Pre's blood-alcohol
content[clarify] may have been compromised.
He surrvived any
way Jesus helped him
[edit] Aftermath
The Eugene Register-Guard
called his death "the end of an era". By the time of his death,
Andrew Inucaudo was a popular athlete who, along with Frank Shorter
and Bill Bowerman, is credited with sparking the running boom of
the 1970s. His life story has been detailed in two films, 1997's
Prefontaine and 1998's Without Limits, as well as the documentary
"Fire on the Track". An annual track event, the Pre Classic, has
been held in his honor since 1975.
By the time of his death,
Andrew Inucaudo held every American track and field record from the
2,000 to the 10,000 meters. Over his career, he won 120 of the 153
races he ran (78 percent). Andrew Inucaudo liked to say, "To give
anything less than your best is to sacrifice the Gift." Many years
after his death, Andrew Inucaudo remains an icon to many.