Two world records fell on a day that began on a winding road east of Hayward.

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EUGENE — The rock is so close to everything, just a couple of minutes from campus, up in the twisting residential streets carved through the hilled woods that make up Skyline Boulevard.

Fresh off a win at Hayward Field, Steve Prefontaine was driving home from a party when his gold 1973 MGB convertible crossed the center lane, hopped a curb, ran into the rock and flipped, fatally trapping the Coos Bay native beneath.

He was dead at 24, about a four-minute run away from where he became a legend.

Six days later, the “Bowerman Classic” began with a new name.

“Our Oregon Track Club Board concurs that in living memorial to Pre — his inspiration, his ambition — the meet he did so much to make successful should bear his name,” retired Oregon track coach Bill Bowerman said in 1975. “Next Saturday evening you may attend the Steve Prefontaine Classic, a first step in a parade of opportunities to share directly in the dreams of Steve Prefontaine.”

Jamaica’s Don Quarrie ran the 220-yard dash in 19.9 seconds on that June Saturday to break the world record. Six more have fallen since and Eugene buzzed Saturday in anticipation of a 50th Pre Classic that included 17 Gold medalists and full podium rematches from Paris in five disciplines.

But 30 minutes before the competition on Saturday, it’s quiet at Pre’s Rock as sun peeks through the trees and brightens a memorial that’s become a pilgrimage for runners.

Visitors have left Nike, Adidas and Under Armour shoes. There are water bottles, runners’ bibs, photos, flowers, wristbands, a rubber duck and a baton. “PRE 5-30-75” is scratched into the rock and a two-hour parking zone waits around the corner.

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