by Michael Bascombe
KINGSTON, Jamaica, July 10, 2026 - Olympic
medallist, NBC commentator, and coach Ato Boldon has described the late Jamaican
sprint coach Stephen Francis as "a great period," saying his death
represents one of the most significant losses the global track and field
community has experienced in decades.
Francis, who died on July 4 at
the age of 62, was widely regarded as one of the greatest sprint coaches in
history. As co-founder of the MVP (Maximising Velocity & Power) Track Club
in 1999, he transformed Jamaica into a sprinting powerhouse, guiding stars such
as Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Asafa Powell, and Shericka Jackson to multiple
Olympic and World Championship medals.
Speaking with Jamaican sports
broadcaster Leighton Levy, Boldon said Francis' impact extended far beyond
Jamaica's shores.
"I think no matter where
your passport or your allegiance, you realise that Stephen Francis was a great.
He wasn't a great Jamaican. He was a great, period," Boldon said.
While acknowledging that Jamaica
would feel the loss most deeply, Boldon stressed that Francis' influence
reshaped the global athletics landscape.
He recalled that when Francis and
his colleagues established the MVP Track Club, many questioned the wisdom of
keeping Jamaica's elite athletes at home instead of sending them through the
traditional United States collegiate system.
"I remember some of the
pushback," Boldon said. "People forget very quickly."
For decades, many of Jamaica's
greatest sprinters—including Merlene Ottey, Don Quarrie, Ray Stewart, Michael
Green, and later Asafa Powell developed through the American collegiate
system before representing Jamaica internationally.
Francis challenged that
long-established model.
"He and the people who were
integral in starting MVP said, 'Wait a minute, why are we sending our athletes
to the NCAA to get run into the ground for four or five years, and then they
come back and give Jamaica what's left? Let's change the thinking.'"
According to Boldon, the proposal
was initially met with considerable resistance.
"A lot of Jamaicans were
like, 'We don't like that. Let's do it the way it has always been."
Francis, however, remained
steadfast in his convictions.
"My first memory when I
heard that Franno had passed was that this was a man who stuck to his guns when
literally an entire population was asking, 'What makes you think this is
somewhere we all want to go?'"
Today, Boldon noted, the success
of the MVP model has made that debate virtually obsolete.
"Of course, that's not even
a thought now."
He said Francis' vision
fundamentally changed how athletes around the world viewed their development
options.
"It changed the thinking
globally. Athletes still have the option to go through the NCAA system, which
is a great system, but they also have other options. They can stay at home,
develop locally, and still become world-class athletes."
Beyond his coaching achievements,
Boldon remembered Francis as someone whose personality often surprised those
meeting him for the first time.
"If you see a picture of
him, you think, 'That's a serious man.' But you talk to him for 15 minutes, and
you realise he's a comedian."
Boldon said Francis' passing
marks the loss of one of athletics' true innovators.
"I think this is one of the
biggest losses we've had in this sport since I've been alive. A lot of the
other great coaches are still around—Bob Kersee and others. So this is
monumental."

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