| The Heritage Mile 
 After Her Final Run, Doris Heritage’s Dreams Remain With Her Student-Athletes
 
   The news media were all over the story: “Running legend gears for 
 
                                                                        her final mile,” declared the . 
 
                                                                        “One final run: Heritage ends her passion in glorious style,” opined
 
                .
 
 
 
             
 
 
 
               
 
                |    For 
                                                                                                            her final competitive mile, Doris Heritage led 200 well-wishers on a memory-making 
 
run for student scholarships. |  |   But had she herself been asked for a
 
headline about her last meet before hip-replacement surgery, two-time Olympian
 
              and five-time world cross country champion Doris Heritage might
 
              easily have written, “Faith is the bridge to an exciting coaching
 
            future!”            
 
             The Heritage Mile in May raised $6,500 for the Doris Heritage
 
              Scholarship Endowment at ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ. But the invitational
 
              meet held at West Seattle’s Southwest Athletic Complex, was more
 
              than a fund-raiser. It was in many respects a reunion for those
 
              special few who know what it is to run for the pure joy of it,
 
              who know what personal dread they would feel if told “no more running.”            
 
             For
 
              four laps, nearly 200 former teammates, former students, coaching
 
              staff and admirers surrounded their mentor and inspiration. Friends
 
              came from as far away as Anchorage, Alaska, to sprint at her side.
 
              It’s not every day that one can run with a sports legend on her
 
              last turn around the track.            
 
             In 38 years of coaching at Seattle Pacific,
 
              countless hundreds of runners have felt the Heritage touch  and
 
              seen the back of her heels. Traci Baker Bianchini ’89, head girls
 
              cross country and track coach at Jackson High School in Everett,
 
              Washington, explained to The Times the essence of Heritage as coach: “She
 
              never stops. Never uses anything as an excuse. She loved running
 
              so much. She never thought about the cost.            
 
             ”Not the broken foot
 
              that kept her off the 1964 Olympic team. Not the torn tendon suffered
 
              just before the 1,500 meters at the 1972 Munich Games. Not even
 
              the seven operations on her feet over the years. And not, apparently,
 
              the artificial hip now a grudging part of her anatomy. “My husband,
 
 
              Ralph, drives me a quarter mile down the road,” she says of her
 
              post-operative routine, “and I get to crutch 10 minutes along the
 
              beach and back.”            
 
             What is that compared to the 100 miles per week
 
              on foot she averaged in the prime of her competitive career?            
 
              It  is something. It is not stopping. It is like reliving the 1950s
 
                when girls weren’t allowed to run on high school track teams
 
                because they might hurt themselves. Heritage ran anyway, in saddle
 
                shoes, through forest and field, chasing her friends on their
 
                bikes and their horses. Why did she run? It was something to
 
                experience the mud and the rain and the hills of God’s creation,
 
              she says.             
 
             Forty-six years later, it is still something. “I can’t
 
                begin to tell you how humbled I am by this experience,” Heritage
 
                says of the Mile meet and its aftermath. “To have all those people
 
                participate and send greetings 
 I want my athletes to realize
 
                the significance of a Christian community.” She thinks they got
 
                the message as the entire men’s track team came to visit her
 
                in the hospital. The medical staff was impressed that her athletes
 
                would take time right before final exams to pray with their coach.
 
             At 62, Heritage has assembled one of the most illustrious
 
                  careers in the running world. The pioneer in women’s distance running
 
                was the first American female to break the 5-minute barrier in
 
                the mile. She is an inductee into eight halls of fame for both
 
                athletes and coaches. She was named one of Washington state’s
 
                50 greatest sports figures of the 20th century by Sports Illustrated.
 
                She once held four world records.              
 
             But for the Seattle Pacific
 
                graduate of 1964, the heart beats strongest for her athletes.
 
                She says she learned a great deal about coaching from the dedicated
 
                example of her friend and mentor, retired SPU Coach Ken Foreman.
 
                Now she’s looking ahead  not behind  toward a continued coaching
 
                career at her alma mater. “I prayed that I would be able to focus
 
                on positive things and not be moping around about how awful it
 
                would be not to run,” she said to The Herald in Everett. “I think
 
                I’ve had an answer to my prayer because I really don’t feel a
 
                bit lost about it when I would expect to.”              
 
             Heritage has set the
 
                gold standard of excellence for students. Ten of her cross country
 
                teams placed in the top 10 at national meets, and SPU has won
 
                women’s conference championships six times since 1993. In all,
 
                Seattle Pacific men and women runners have scored at nationals
 
                36 times in the last 26 years.               
 
             Though she will of necessity adapt
 
                  her coaching style to present circumstances, athletes can still
 
                expect to have to run to keep up with Doris Heritage.              
 
             
 
    — BY CLINT KELLY— PHOTO BY DANIEL SHEEH
 
  
      
  
 
  
      
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  From the President
 As ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ gains notice nationwide, President Philip Eaton
 
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