Elaine Thompson-Herah’s Olympic champion coach Stephen Francis, the architect of Jamaica’s sprint dominance, has died. The JAAA called him a ‘titan’ whose methods produced world records—including Thompson-Herah’s 100m gold in Tokyo 2021—and transformed MVP Track Club into a global powerhouse.

**Who was Stephen Francis?**

Francis wasn’t just a coach—he was the force behind Jamaica’s sprint revolution. As MVP Track Club’s co-founder and head coach, he built a system that turned raw talent into Olympic and world-championship gold. His athletes didn’t just win; they rewrote the record books. Thompson-Herah’s 10.54-second world record in 2021? That was Francis’ blueprint in action.

**How did Francis shape Elaine Thompson-Herah’s career?**

The JAAA’s statement made it clear: Thompson-Herah’s rise wasn’t luck. Francis spotted her potential early, then drilled technique, discipline, and racecraft until it became second nature. His approach—meticulous, relentless—turned her into the fastest woman on the planet. But it wasn’t just about times. Francis instilled resilience, the kind that carried Thompson-Herah through injuries and rivalries, like her 2022 clash with Shericka Jackson at the World Championships.

**What does his death mean for Jamaican track and field?**

Francis’ legacy isn’t just in medals. It’s in the culture he built: a belief that Jamaica could dominate sprints from its own soil. Athletes like Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Asafa Powell followed his system, but Thompson-Herah’s Olympic gold in Tokyo 2021 cemented his place in history. The JAAA called his loss ‘profound,’ but his methods live on in every Jamaican sprinter training today.

**Where does Thompson-Herah go from here?**

There’s no replacement for Francis’ direct influence, but his philosophy endures. Thompson-Herah, now 31, has already transitioned into motherhood while defending her titles. His death serves as a reminder: the athletes he shaped—including Thompson-Herah—now carry the torch. The next generation at MVP Track Club will step into his footsteps, but none will match the raw impact of his era.

Francis’ passing was announced by the JAAA on July 5, 2026. His coaching career spanned decades, producing 17 Olympic medals and 23 world titles across his athletes’ careers.