I spoke to Streeter about his article on Stevens, what the sport means to the runner and his family, and how high school cross-country meets are much more meaningful than the miles covered.
Can you tell us more about Stevens’s relationship with running?
So much of what he does is connected to that sense of honoring his Yerington Paiute tribe and Native Americans and first nations and Indigenous people all over. He’s aware of the atrocities and the challenges of the past and the challenges of today. He’s both spiritual and practical and aware of politics. When he’s out running, those are the moments for him to meditate on all of that.
It’s something to get to that level in a sport that is so grueling. You have to love it, and he does. He lives for it: the sensation of being in his body, claiming that space out on the trail.
You can see it in his stride, you can see it in the way he talks about the sport. It’s not drudgery for him. He talks about the pain as something he embraces, enjoys, and wants to be challenged by.
He has all of these big dreams for running. He’d love to run for the University of Oregon but I also think he realizes, who knows if that will happen? He’s definitely putting in the work — running 50 miles to 60 miles or more a week, a ton of it by himself.
I’ve been around a lot of great athletes in my life: from my days as a collegiate and professional tennis player to my current life as a sportswriter. Ku is among the most disciplined and self-motivated athletes I’ve seen.