Athletics-Gout eyes 10-seconds barrier at Australia's junior championships


World Athletics Championships Tokyo 2025 - Men's 200m Semi-Final - Japan National Stadium, Tokyo, Japan - September 18, 2025 Australia's Gout Gout in action during the heats REUTERS/Edgar Su

MELBOURNE, April 17 (Reuters) - Teenage ⁠sprinter Gout Gout will look to make another statement run at the Australian junior championships ⁠in Brisbane over the weekend following his blistering 200 metres win last weekend.

The 18-year-old ‌generated global headlines at the senior championships in Sydney last weekend by claiming the 200 title in 19.67 seconds, an under-20 world record.

Gout's immediate goal will be breaking the 10-second barrier on Saturday during the semi-finals and final at the Queensland Sport ​and Athletics Centre (QSAC) in Brisbane after running 10.19 in Friday's ⁠heats.

Only two Australians have managed it: national ⁠record holder Patrick Johnson (9.93) and Lachlan Kennedy, who ran a personal best (PB) 9.96 twice at the senior ⁠championships.

Gout ‌set his PB of 10 seconds-flat in February on the same QSAC track and is confident of raising the bar.

"100%," he told reporters on Friday.

"Hopefully the wind stays pretty calm and ⁠anything is possible."

Johnson, who ran his 9.93 in Mito, Japan ​in 2003, has warned against putting ‌too much pressure on Gout at his age but is ready for his national record ⁠to fall.

"Yes, I ​am the first (to break 10 seconds) but I never want to be the last," Johnson told local media this week.

"I have said to these guys my records are there to be broken, you create your own history and ⁠your own reality."

Gout will also have a chance to ​improve on his national 200 record when the preliminaries start on Sunday.

While every Gout improvement sparks a media frenzy in Australia and triggers comparisons with Usain Bolt's runs during his teenage years, some in the athletics ⁠world are yet to be convinced.

Former Olympic and world 100m champion Justin Gatlin said Gout was used to running in Australia and needed to prove himself overseas.

"You can run fast in comfort, everyone can run fast in comfort. But can you run fast in discomfort? That's where it's at," Gatlin said ​this week.

"That's going to be a challenge for him because he's so ⁠used to running in Australia."

Gout said there would always be "haters".

"If there's haters, it means you are doing something ​right," he said.

"It is what it is. I never take ‌it (to heart) so I just keep running. It was ​pretty fast so that's probably why they were mad.

"It motivates me to do an even bigger race and run even faster."

(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Athletics

Shereen clocks golden comeback, Umar roars in Lion City too
Athletics-World Athletics turns down 11 switches to Turkey over recruitment drive
Jing Xuan opens season with silver at Singapore Open
Athletics-Diamond League to raise prize money in select events in 2026
Young high jumpers eye big leap in Lion City
Athletics-World champion Jepchirchir to miss London Marathon due to injury
Govt provides continued support for Commonwealth Games gold medallist's fight against MND
Athletics-Teen sensation Gout smashes Australian 200m record with sub-20-second run
Athletics-World Athletics to launch standalone marathon championship from 2030
Athletics-Reedie, influential Olympic and anti-doping figure, dies at 84

Others Also Read