MCHS: 1988 Olympian Jeff Atkinson

With one lap to go in the 1988 Olympic 1500m finals in Seoul, Korea, Jeff Atkinson runs shoulder-to-shoulder with eventual gold medal winner Peter Rono of Kenya. Photo courtesy of the Atkinson family

by David Rosenfeld

Editor’s note: The following story is reprinted from Easy Reader January, 2009.

Jeff Atkinson stood before the team of cross-country athletes he coaches on a recent afternoon at Malaga Cove Plaza. 

 “How many of you are planning on watching the Olympics this week,” asked the Palos Verdes High School coach, wearing the same outfit as the students – red shorts and a white T-shirt. A show of hands went up. 

“When you’re watching the games I want you to remember that without the drive and hard work, none of those athletes would be there,” Atkinson said. “It’s that same drive I want you to take to your own training.” 

Then the coach, without a mention of his own accomplishments, ran off with the team down the street. 

That’s the way it is with Atkinson who says most of the younger students don’t even know he ran in the Seoul Olympics in 1988, that 25 years ago he was one of the world’s fastest runners. 

“If they find out it’s only because someone told them,” Atkinson said. “It’s not that I want it to be a secret, I just don’t want any of the younger runners to feel intimidated.”

In 1989, Atkinson was ranked the nation’s fastest runner in the mile. He still holds the Stanford Track Record with a 3:55 mile. And his record at Mira Costa in the 3200 meters still stands with a time of 9:07.

Jeff Atkinson believes in cross training. He tells his runners to keep it fun because their sport is more punishment than any other sport. Easy Reader file photo

As the Olympic games take place this month, renewed attention on athletes like Atkinson show just how rare it is to compete on the world’s largest stage. Even 25 years later, Atkinson is still considered the most successful runner to come out of the South Bay since Louis Zamperini in 1936.

Atkinson said he attributes his success to hard work, staying relatively injury free and natural ability. 

“You do have to have the drive and a reason to do all that work for a very esoteric goal,” Atkinson said. “I feel like running is a noble pursuit and an honorable way to spend your time on planet earth.”

Despite the odds, every young track star dreams of running in the Olympics. While standing on an Olympic podium represents a lofty goal, it should not be the end-all, Atkinson said. 

“It’s not about becoming pro or making the Olympics. It’s about providing opportunities for success, defined as the best you can be on any given day with the tools you’ve been given,” he said. 

That’s the message Atkinson brings to his team of cross-country runners and success likely follows. The team typically ranks among the best in the state, including last year when the boys and girls cross country team won the Division 3 state championship.

As a testament to the team’s training regiment on the backs of each T-shirt are printed calendars where runners, including the coach, record the distance they run each day with a marker. The T-shirts are a constant reminder that running is more a personal challenge than anything else, Atkinson said.

Along with coaching at PV High for the past 10 years, Atkinson teaches private running instruction for kids and adults. He said he’s run across many parents over the years who believe their son or daughter will someday compete in the Olympics. 

“There is a prevailing feeling in all parents that their child is going to do something great,” Atkinson says. “We try to ground them in reality.”

Only about one-tenth of 1 percent of high school athletes play at the next level, and the same thing happens at the college level, he said. 

Few athletes will ever attain the success enjoyed by runners like Atkinson and even Merha. Yet the dream of standing on an Olympic podium, one of the rarest achievements in sports, remains one of the ultimate goals for any athlete. 

“Every runner dreams of being in the Olympics when they are at a cross country meet,” Atkinson said. “So that’s part of the show. You have to have big goals to keep people motivated and interested. At the high school level it’s really important to emphasize that it’s about the process and not the goal. It’s about the experience along the way, which is far more fulfilling and life changing than any championship.”

Atkinson said he hopes that his style of coaching helps form bonds among the students in the same way sharing difficult experiences in an army boot camp strengthens the connection among soldiers. 

“My whole goal now as a coach is to create an environment for that experience to occur for the kids that I coach,” he said. “They don’t actually have to achieve lofty levels to get the full understanding of commitment, honor, and character, satisfaction and integrity that’s a result of all this activity.” ER

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