The global track and field community is in deep mourning following the passing of legendary Jamaican coach Stephen “Franno” Francis after a courageous battle with stage four cancer. Francis was not just a coach; he was a visionary, a disruptor, and the foundational architect of Jamaica’s modern sprinting dominance.
Before the mid-2000s, conventional wisdom held that if a talented Jamaican athlete wanted to reach the world stage, they had to accept a scholarship to an American university or train abroad. Stephen Francis looked at that system and said, “No.”
By founding the MVP (Maximising Velocity and Power) Track Club and partnering with the University of Technology (UTech) in Kingston, Francis created a domestic haven. He gave Jamaican athletes the option to stay at home, close to their families, culture, and support systems, while receiving world-class coaching. He single-handedly shifted the power dynamics of global track and field.
The Blueprint: From Asafa to the Sprint Queens
Before Coach Glen Mills guided Usain Bolt to planetary stardom at Racers Track Club, it was Stephen Francis who first proved to the world that Jamaica could produce a homegrown world-record holder.
Under “Franno’s” strict, analytical, and uncompromising guidance, Asafa Powell shattered the 100m world record, clocking $9.77$ seconds in 2005 and lowering it to $9.74$ seconds in 2007. Powell became the sub-10-second king, proving that the MVP system was elite.
Francis’s genius truly shone in his ability to spot raw talent that others overlooked. His crown jewels were the undisputed queens of sprinting:
- Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce: Handpicked by Francis, she went from an unheralded youngster to back-to-back Olympic 100m champion (2008, 2012) and a multi-time World Champion.
- Elaine Thompson-Herah: Under his tutelage, she achieved the historic “double-double,” winning both the 100m and 200m Olympic titles at Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020.
A Legacy Beyond the Stars
Francis’s stable of champions stretched incredibly deep. He was the mastermind behind Olympic hurdles champion Melaine Walker, and elite sub-10 sprinters like Michael Frater and Nesta Carter—men who formed the backbone of Jamaica’s dominant, gold-medal-winning 4x100m relay teams.
Stephen Francis changed the economic and cultural landscape of Jamaican sports. Because of him, generations of athletes realized they didn’t need to leave their island to conquer the world.
Rest in power, Coach Francis. The tracks of the world will never forget your name.

Phillyardy Vibes Media Editorial Team
Phillyardy Vibes Media is a digital publishing platform covering Jamaican athletics, sports culture, and Caribbean storytelling.




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