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'Tremendous loss'
Track coach, co-founder of Nike dies at age 88
Posted: Saturday December 25, 1999 06:03 PM
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Bill Bowerman coached dozens of world-class distance runners at Oregon -- including Steve Prefontaine. AP |
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- Bill Bowerman, the Oregon track coach who
co-founded Nike and pressed foam rubber into his wife's waffle iron
to create the modern running shoe, has died. He was 88.
He died in his sleep Friday night or early Saturday in his home
in Fossil, company spokesman Scott Reames said.
Bowerman helped introduce jogging to the masses with his book on
the subject in 1967. He was also the U.S. track coach at the
terrorist-scarred 1972 Munich Olympics.
He coached at Oregon from 1949-72, and his most famous runner
there was Steve Prefontaine, the brash, mustachioed prodigy who
inspired a generation of distance runners. Prefontaine died in a
car crash in 1975.
Nike chairman Phil Knight was one of Bowerman's pupils and
called him one of the great influences on his life. "This is a tremendous loss for [Knight] and for Nike," Reames said.
Together they formed what became a multibillion-dollar shoe and apparel company.
Bowerman retired from the Nike board of directors this year.
The company announced in October that a silhouette of Bowerman
in his old Tyrolean hat would appear on Nike running shoes, along
with a smaller "swoosh," the company's trademark symbol.
Knight, who trained under Bowerman in the late '50s and who was
later a business student at Stanford, teamed with his old coach.
Their operation evolved into Nike, named for the Greek goddess of
victory.
Initially, each chipped in $500 and manufactured 330 pairs of
the new waffle-designed shoe that they sold for $3.30 a pair.
Bowerman's team wore the shoes. Athletes around the world began
wearing them, followed by the public.
Bowerman created the modern running shoe in the late 1960s by
fashioning a lightweight sole with leather, glue, latex and his
wife's waffle iron. He experimented with different cushions and
layers of material to give his runners an edge.
Bowerman called the Munich Olympics the "worst experience I've
had in my entire educational and athletic life." An attack left 11
Israeli athletes dead, along with five terrorists and a West German
policeman.
Bowerman said he had already been concerned about a lack of
security in the Olympic village. The security, he said, was "boys
and girls probably 15 to 18 years old in Bavarian mountain
uniforms."
Bowerman coached 24 NCAA individual champions and four NCAA team
champions in 1962, 1964, 1965 and 1970. In 16 of 24 years, his
Oregon track team finished in the top 10 in NCAA championships.
He refused to take much credit for building Oregon into a
national track power. He once said his predecessor, Bill Hayward,
who coached from 1904 to 1947, took charge at the notoriously
rain-drenched school, separating the "swimmers from the
sunbathers."
Bowerman, who was born in Portland, is survived by his wife,
Barbara, and sons, Jon, Jay and Tom, and
four grandchildren.
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