Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Coach Jeff Galloway: The Enduring Gift of Run-Walk-Run

Jeff Galloway and the Enduring Gift of Run-Walk-Run

One of many RunDisney Expos with Coach Jeff

It has taken me some time to write this, as we accept the loss of "Coach Jeff", who has meant so much to do many. The end of this 2025-26 RunDisney season feels bittersweet, as we celebrate the joy of his spirit, try to continue passing it on (as he would certainly have us do) as we mourn and feel the weight of this loss of our running coach, mentor, and friend Jeff Galloway. He has left an amazing legacy with us that I would be grateful to pass forward just a fraction of; Coach Jeff was the reason many people kept running for decades, and for me personally, he helped shape a path that I could not have imagined when I first joined Galloway Training to get back to marathon running, and then years later the Galloway Pacing Team, which has carried me to countless 26.2 and 13.1, as well as a few Ultras. Over time, that inspiration and recognition of what was possible led me to want to share this magic with others, and become a Program Director for the Galloway Training Program. I now feel connected to groups across the country and around the world thanks to Jeff, and experience the joy of running in ways that makes every race weekend and neighborhood run feel more accessible and more meaningful.

Jeff’s impact was never only about miles, finish times, or race medals. He reminded everyone that they were an athlete and a runner - their identity as "you belong here", even if just running a few steps. He changed the culture of distance running forever by making it more humane, more welcoming, and more sustainable for ordinary people. His signature run-walk-run method, developed in the 1970s, has since opened the door for millions of runners and walkers to participate in the sport with less fear, less injury, and more confidence. I see it at every Disney race, every NYC marathon, every new runner I work with. In a world that often celebrates pushing harder at all costs and is ego-driven, Jeff offered a different vision: one that treated rest, rhythm, and adaptation as strengths rather than weaknesses.  He also always saw you as the most important person in the room, and focused 100% on your concerns, every time he spoke to you. This was uncanny, and everyone I have met has agreed on this single "superpower" he held at expos with hundreds of people and on the road. 

That vision mattered most I think because it helped redefine who gets to call themselves a runner. There was a time in my life (early 30s) when recovering from a health crisis that I could barely walk for a year, and I struggled to get back into my love of running over the coming decade. I gradually found my way back to distance racing and marathons because I gave myself permission to run-walk-run and be kind to my body, believing in myself. Jeff understood that many people do not begin with elite backgrounds or natural speed, and many of us come back from harrowing journeys. Some start later in life, some return after injury, and some need a more forgiving structure to stay in the sport. The genius of the Galloway method was not just its simplicity, but its generosity and unconditional acceptance. It makes running feel possible for beginners to crusty veterans, and especially people who had long believed the sport was not for them.

One of the things I value most about Jeff’s life story is how clearly he combined achievement with humility. Here was an Olympian, an innovator, an author, a coach, and a tireless educator, but he never built his legacy by standing above the people he helped or gave unsolicited advice. I ever heard him utter a negative word about anyone, and is wife Barb recently recounted to us that she had never heard him raise his voice to anyone, across decades of marriage and frustrating situations. What a mentor for our times, and one that I know I direly needed to see. Instead, he stood beside us That posture of encouragement is part of why so many runners describe him not only as a coach but as a friend, even if they only saw him once a year at an expo. He had a way of making people feel seen and then the gift of remembering them, and that may be one of the greatest gifts any teacher can offer.  

He was also a student of the history of the sport, and one of my favorite "running experiences alongside Jeff" was during the pandemic when he and Dean Karnazes teamed up to take us on a 300+ mile challenge across ancient Greece (virtual, in my ears) as we learned about the culture and beginnings of the marathon. This New York Times profile from early 2026 captured something especially moving about Jeff’s outlook in his later years, how he passed on a legacy of knowledge and enthusiasm that was almost ineffable. Even while facing serious heart issues, he remained attached to the dream of one more marathon, not as a vanity project but as an expression of purpose and joy. That determination says a great deal about him: he was not simply teaching people how to run farther or faster, but how to keep moving toward life with hope, discipline, and gratitude. His story reminds us that running can be both practical and spiritual, both disciplined and deeply personal.

For my wife and I (indirectly how we met by the way) Jeff’s legacy is inseparable from community; Through RunDisney and the Galloway Training Program, he built spaces where people could show up as they were and still belong. The pacing groups, the training teams, the repeat seasons, and the shared race weekends created a kind of informal fellowship that went beyond training plans. We are not just improving fitness, we're forming lifelong relationships and habits, building confidence, and becoming part of a wider global running family. It is a wonderful family to be a part of, imperfect and full of diversity like any family. Coach Jeff was definitely the grandfather figure we all looked to in difficult times. That is a rare achievement, and it helps explain why his influence continues to resonate so widely.

To come to a close, I would add that what I admire most is that Jeff never treated the run-walk-run method as a "compromise". He presented it as a wise, legitimate, and effective way to run well and stay healthy, playing the long run game. That idea has only grown more relevant over time, especially as more runners look for ways to sustain their practice across decades rather than seasons, and it becomes less about PRs (note that many PRs are set and even sub-3 hour marathoners that swear by the Galloway method). However, in that sense, Jeff’s work aligns beautifully with a broader anthropology of running: the understanding that running is not just about performance, but about identity, adaptation, belonging, and meaning. There are so many tributes one could write about Jeff Galloway, but the best one may be the simplest: He changed lives by helping and genuinely caring about people. He gave permission to slow down without giving up. He created a method, but he also created a culture of encouragement and positivity around all body types and abilities. And perhaps the best tribute we can offer now is exactly the one he would recognize: keep moving, share the love, and remind one another, “You can do it.”

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