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Steve Prefontaine running at Hayward Field in June, 1972.
Steve Prefontaine running at Hayward Field in June, 1972. (Photo: NCAA Photos via Getty)
In Stride

Farewell, Old Hayward Field

After a series of postponements, a tentative construction date is scheduled for July. Not everyone is happy about it.

Published: 
Steve Prefontaine running at Hayward Field in June, 1972.
(Photo: NCAA Photos via Getty)

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Last week听new details emerged about the renovation of Hayward Field, the University of Oregon鈥檚 storied track and field stadium, which is slated to host the 2021 IAAF World Championships. While initial plans left much of the original stadium intact鈥攊ncluding its beloved east grandstand鈥攖hat no longer seems to be the case. Renderings in show听images of a sleek, ultramodern stadium听equipped with a transparent wraparound roof and, bafflingly, an adjacent nine-story tower.听The project is scheduled to begin construction in July听after multiple postponements and reportedly will听cost more than $200 million. Phil Knight, the听Oregon alumnus and Nike cofounder, is a principal benefactor.

鈥淢y business life was born on Hayward Field, so this is a deeply personal project for me,鈥 Knight said in a University of Oregon . He isn鈥檛 the only person who feels that way.

As Austin Meeks, a sports columnist for Eugene鈥檚 Register-Guard, 听听, some听longtime Hayward faithful are wary that, with its futuristic splendor, the new design lacks the intimacy of its predecessor. To comply with IAAF regulations, Hayward will need听to boost seating capacity from 10,000 to 30,000 when it hosts the World Championships. Although the permanent capacity听will be kept at 12,900, that number is itself a sizable increase, prompting fears of empty seats and a dampening of the venue鈥檚 famous aura, known as the 鈥淗ayward magic.鈥澨

鈥淲hen the magic is there, it鈥檚 incredible,鈥 Jay Bowerman, son of late Oregon track coach and Nike cofounder Bill Bowerman, said in a recent Register-Guard . 鈥淵ou leave a facility half-empty, and no matter how excited the remaining fans are, it just doesn鈥檛 happen anymore.鈥

There鈥檚 also the question of whether that magic听can be revived without the east grandstand. Built in 1925, those wooden bleachers have long held a prominent place in Hayward鈥攁nd听by extension听Nike鈥攍ore. Situated along the back straightaway of the track, they have been a second home to many of the country鈥檚 most passionate track fans for generations. When I attended a press trip to the 2015 Pre Classic track meet (disclosure: the trip was paid for by Nike), , the University of Oregon鈥檚 associate athletic director and a key figure in bringing the World Championships to Eugene, spoke about the east grandstand with reverence.

鈥淏ill Bowerman didn鈥檛 touch these stands听because he loved these stands,鈥 Lananna said. 鈥淥nce we do our renovations for 2021, these stands will remain wood and they will look exactly the same.鈥

A rendering of the new Hayward Field
A rendering of the new Hayward Field (Courtesy SRG/Studio 16/Bradley Parks)

At least听that was the line in 2015, when Nike design legend Tinker Hatfield was still in charge of听the blueprints for听the new stadium. At some point during the past three years, those plans were quietly scrapped and the reins were handed over to the architecture firm听. Although the reason for the change remains unclear, the University of Oregon has asserted that the new design is听consistent with the school鈥檚 legacy of innovation. In a deft PR move last week, the university introducing the reimagined听Hayward Field that included vintage footage of听Bowerman talking about a redesign of the old west grandstand, which was torn down and rebuilt in the early seventies. The message was clear: even Hayward鈥檚 patron saint听wasn鈥檛 afraid to make changes.

The primary impetus for the new stadium is the 2021听IAAF World Championships, itself a beleaguered issue. For one thing, there鈥檚 an into how Eugene was selected to host. The city was given the nod in the absence of any听formal bidding process. Lamine Diack, who was president of the IAAF when Eugene was awarded听the championships, was on charges that he鈥檇 accepted bribes to cover up Russian doping violations.

Some locals have qualms about whether hosting a major international event like the World Championships is really in Eugene鈥檚 interest. (The preceding three took place in London, Beijing, and Moscow.) 鈥淓ugene听is probably the smallest city, by a good measure, that has ever hosted the World Championships,鈥 said听Bob Penny, a carpenter who ran track at South Eugene High School, attended architecture school at the University of Oregon in the 1970s, and has been a 听of the Hayward Field construction plans.

鈥淓ugene really didn鈥檛 go through a bid process where there was an ask to the town like, 鈥楧o you want to do this?鈥欌 Penny added. 鈥淭he IAAF and the 鈥楿niversity of Nike鈥 like to do things their own way.鈥澨

Then again, Eugene has hosted multiple track and field Olympic Trials and NCAA Championships in the past. The city is also home to , an events company,听helmed by Lananna, that lobbied hard for Hayward Field to host the World Championships. (Ironically, TrackTown USA uses the soon-to-be-razed east grandstand in听.)

A track-level rendering of the new stadium
A track-level rendering of the new stadium (Courtesy SRG/Studio 16/Bradley Parks)

I asked Scott Krause, a Eugene native who launched听听through Change.org,听how he felt about the argument that the new design was merely part of the natural evolution of a venue that has evolved over time. 鈥淲hen people talk about how you can鈥檛 keep things forever, well, they鈥檝e done a pretty good job of keeping the Sistine Chapel, the Eiffel Tower, and the Empire State Building,鈥 Krause said, adding that he was in favor of combining historical elements of Hayward with new features听rather than starting from scratch.

Not everyone who has a history with Hayward Field is so sentimental. In an e-mail, Lauren Fleshman, a collegiate all-American who ran professionally for the Eugene-based Oregon Track Club until 2012, suggested that there might also be a kind of Hayward hegemony.

鈥淗ayward Field is a special place, but let鈥檚 not get too precious about a stadium,鈥 Fleshman said. 鈥淲e need to ask ourselves, which history exactly are we clinging so tightly to? If we鈥檙e being honest, it鈥檚 primarily a history of white distance-runner dudes, a single story of track and field anchored by [Steve] Prefontaine and Bowerman鈥攃haracters who can do no wrong after death, who only get larger with time and marketing dollars. Let鈥檚 make it a place where new stories can be written. Where new heroes can be seen against a new backdrop.鈥
听听
Whether the looming specter of Prefontaine or听Bowerman is a boon or a burden for old Hayward Field is open to debate. Unsurprisingly, Krause, when asked about the pervasiveness of the Pre legend, said that he feels it has an inspirational听rather than oppressive effect on young runners. Nevertheless, even Krause admits that future legends would probably have an easier time establishing themselves in a venue that didn鈥檛 bear the nickname听鈥渢he house that Pre built.鈥

Those trying to salvage parts of that house hold out hope. On Monday, Eugene鈥檚 city council voted to consider an application to designate the east grandstand a city landmark. 鈥淭he east grandstand was designed by Ellis Lawrence, who is basically Oregon鈥檚 most famous architect,鈥 Penny, who attended the vote, told me. 鈥淲hen it comes to all the characteristics you evaluate to determine whether a building is historic鈥攕ignificance of events, significance of people, significance of architecture鈥攖he east grandstand is eminently qualified.鈥 Still, landmark status might not be enough to save it. There are bureaucratic loopholes that the university can use to remove the structure. There has even听been discussion about moving it to a new location, outside the stadium.

Regardless of听how things turn out, those who want to pay their respects to the old Hayward magic will need to move fast. This year鈥檚 听takes place听May 25鈥26. Construction is scheduled to begin a few weeks later. 听

Lead Photo: NCAA Photos via Getty

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