-Umm..ok, to some degree you are right BUT im sure that you agree that an more advanced pianist are considerably more suited for op 10 no 1 than a less advanced pianist (or a plain newbie).
(As a sidenote, this piece is more about streching and jumping than coordination)
Advance is vague. Rather, it's the select sum of skill and understanding that are required by the music. At the same time you could use the music to pick up the skills, by recognizing those deficiencies and working to fix them. Being more advance in one sense means you have a greater probability of having more of those skills, and can thus more easily work on those you lack. It's hard to say without more details from the OP, where they actually are in his or her development.
The distinct problem with the Chopin etudes, especially at the indicated tempos, is that they present distinct problems that can only be solved by getting over the biases most early pedagogical material tend to instill.
Coordination is a catch all term which would include jumping and what could be considered "stretching", but more particularly:
*How to time and organize the jumps in rhythmic motion and use it to relieve the burden at lower coordination levels. The more you solve the degree of freedom problem at higher levels, the less you have to do it at lower levels.
*Rather than stretching, how to time the opening and closing of the hand, and coordinate with the above. How to coordinate the opening and closing of the hand with the flexion and extension of the forearm by the upper arm.
*Coordinating all these motions such that you can bring out the underlying voice leading structure over longer time spans.
*Organizing your rhythm and coordination to feel the piece in two-bar hyper-measure.
The art of piano is the realization that the rhythmic motions of the body are the physical counterpart of the musical long line and phrase rhythm in the music, which is ultimately at act of coordination.