What Happened To The Fastest Boys In History? (100m ages 7-19)

  Рет қаралды 1,225,877

Jumpman

Jumpman

Күн бұрын

Trayvon Bromell, Nyckoles Harbor, Puripol Boonson, Willie Washington & Yoshide Kiryu are just some of the names who hold age group 100m world records.
But what happened to them after the hype? After all the 'next Usain Bolt' talk?
Chapters:
00:00 - Intro
00:20 - Age 6, 7, 8 & 9
01:14 - Age 10 & 11
01:58 - Age 12
02:38 - Age 13
03:29 - Age 14 & 15
04:06 - Age 16
04:53 - Age 17
05:57 - Age 18 & 19

Пікірлер: 707
@PrimeSuperboy
@PrimeSuperboy 10 ай бұрын
"vanished into normality" what an interesting turn of phrase.
@lowwbeat
@lowwbeat 2 ай бұрын
fr
@galimbertino4939
@galimbertino4939 10 ай бұрын
you forgot to mention Gonzalo Arrubia, run a 11.27 at age of 49. I think he is definitively a good prospect for the future.
@N.O.A_YT
@N.O.A_YT 10 ай бұрын
lol
@Dxsireee
@Dxsireee 10 ай бұрын
Is this a joke
@2FadeMusic
@2FadeMusic 10 ай бұрын
@@Dxsireee obviously
@jasonmdt
@jasonmdt 10 ай бұрын
fastest records of 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, and ............... 49 year olds.
@Dxsireee
@Dxsireee 10 ай бұрын
@@2FadeMusic I knew it was a joke.
@HkFinn83
@HkFinn83 10 ай бұрын
Most of the youth records are held by kids who were fully matured at a very young age.
@adriendebosse6941
@adriendebosse6941 10 ай бұрын
This. There can be a significant discrepency between real age and "physical" age.
@gordonramsdale
@gordonramsdale 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, that’s why it varies so much whether they will actually be successful later on.
@ninamatthews8747
@ninamatthews8747 10 ай бұрын
That first Japanese kid just left straight dust to the other boys. That was crazy, 😂
@JosePenamyurl
@JosePenamyurl 3 ай бұрын
How did he run so fast
@dennisrobinson8008
@dennisrobinson8008 Ай бұрын
@@JosePenamyurl Trained to do so, it's no accident.
@user-wu3mc3yo1v
@user-wu3mc3yo1v 10 күн бұрын
Yeah bro how did he run that fast at only 11 years old? That should be impossible
@TotalRunningProductions
@TotalRunningProductions 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the shout out concerning Nyckoles Harbor! The kid is a legend. Loved the video by the way. Always entertaining to highlight young kids running fast. Keep up the great content!
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 10 ай бұрын
Damn man I'm such a big fan, so cool to see your comment! And cheers bro of course, your vids are a huge inspiration in general!
@kevinbell3700
@kevinbell3700 9 ай бұрын
@@JumpmanTF The clickbait nonsense aside...
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 10 ай бұрын
Asinga has now broken the age 18 record with a time of 9.89. (edit 2) Seen a lot of Tobogo and Asinga comments, Tobogo was 19 when he ran 9.91 and Issam Asinga hasn't run a wind legal sub 10 YET! So these other records still stand as of today. (Edit 1)
@silasmitchell3575
@silasmitchell3575 10 ай бұрын
Marcellus Moore has the record as a 14-year-old he ran a 10.40, He's from Plainfield Illinois, and has the state record. He now runs for texas and has a pb of 9.99
@unotir7109
@unotir7109 10 ай бұрын
@@silasmitchell3575I think that one was an unlucky tailwind of +2.1 just 0.1 off legal
@jayure1346
@jayure1346 Ай бұрын
Drugs
@trinidadrodriquez876
@trinidadrodriquez876 Ай бұрын
Asinga was caught for. Using peds.
@sachinuchil8890
@sachinuchil8890 9 ай бұрын
This is one of the best track videos on KZfaq ! Loved every hundredth second of it !
@kermitzefrog1163
@kermitzefrog1163 10 ай бұрын
This was a super interesting and well made video. Especially for someone with only 65 subs. Great stuff keep it up
@scottrichardson7838
@scottrichardson7838 9 ай бұрын
Very common to see very fast teenagers who top-out early then fade away. I know this because I too, was a very successful youth athlete. I was ranked in the top 8 in the world as a junior at one point, with a windy 10.38 and legal 10.40's at age 17, 18, 19 etc... But the demands of normal life, work, family etc ensured I couldn't put the focus and efforts in as needed to stay at my best. I did make a comeback at age 29 and hit some 10.50's and into my early 30's but we never the same as when I was 17-20 years old.
@TheBooban
@TheBooban 8 ай бұрын
You also weighed nothing as a kid. Helps alot.
@scott-richardson
@scott-richardson 8 ай бұрын
@@TheBoobantrue for many, but I weight about the same now as I did as a teenager.... I was 85kg as a teenager. 87kg now.
@gibranvazquez5976
@gibranvazquez5976 8 ай бұрын
@@TheBooban Actually weight is not so much of a problem as long as is you can move it. it can be better than being too light can be bad because of wind resistance.
@robertt9342
@robertt9342 8 ай бұрын
@@gibranvazquez5976. That’s doesn’t make sense, we aren’t made of paper.
@KeertikaAndFallenTree
@KeertikaAndFallenTree 8 ай бұрын
@@robertt9342 For me it kinda does. The faster you go, the more you should apply force on the air thus increasing the resistance you feel when running. At least, it sounds plausible in my head.
@danielfreeman649
@danielfreeman649 10 ай бұрын
This is one of the best videos ever, so interesting. Thank you
@runrightmike
@runrightmike 10 ай бұрын
you deserve to be viral bro, one of my favourite watches in a while
@SilencedButNotForgotten
@SilencedButNotForgotten 10 ай бұрын
Great and informative video! Something that was missing in sprinting! Thank you! ❤
@dpw181
@dpw181 9 ай бұрын
This was a great idea well executed. I love trivia and I love track & field. That Thai 16 year-old running 10.09 is exciting and I hope he progresses well. I love when Asians do well in sprinting and they always crank out efficient 4x1 relay teams and both China and Japan have won Worlds or Oly relay medals. I read (in a 1972 Sports Illustrated) the Thai 100 record in 1972 was 10.0 by Anat Ratanapol but his Wikipedia page says his PR is 10.1. This is the only update from that record I've ever heard. I think those are the only two world-class Thai sprinters I heard of.
@thetreekeeper143
@thetreekeeper143 3 ай бұрын
Asians are generally considered miniature human being. Their body will never develop as big and massive as blacks or Caucasians. So it's hard for the Asians to win as their stride length are tiny compared to other races.
@stansmith3763
@stansmith3763 9 ай бұрын
Great video, nice job on the compilation 👍
@martinh5402
@martinh5402 9 ай бұрын
Hey Thanks Jumpman great vid, very interesting to see these dudes competing in their prime. Willie seems to have gone through puberty at 7!! Interesting to see the ceiling for Puripol!
@bradreid6057
@bradreid6057 10 ай бұрын
Good and informative video. There are several things "in play" here. For the younger sprinter age groups, one often sees the field divided by puberty. And even after most kids have entered puberty, the length of their growth cycle matters where larger people tend to continue growing over longer time spans. Anyway, we all have seen the "men among boys" featured in sporting events. Just typically speaking and broadly across most sports, precocious athletes most often peak early. This is true in weightlifting in classes where bodyweights are limited; true, too, in pro football where star running backs coming in to the NFL are often as good (yards per carry) as they will ever be within a year or so. One last comment that the more "skill" a sport has, the longer the potential to increase performance exists.
@CapslockActive
@CapslockActive 10 ай бұрын
great video, keep on going your channel is going to explode
@zzzFaw
@zzzFaw 10 ай бұрын
great video man keep it up
@JasonTorpy
@JasonTorpy 8 ай бұрын
love it! Did you do a reverse list? maybe top 20 or even top50 runners and what they looked like before age10?
@sitasin6545
@sitasin6545 10 ай бұрын
Super interesting idea, those international age records are really interesting statistics but so many incredible junior athletes just drop off the map, I have wondered what happened to a lot of them. I'd be curious for other events and girls as well
@mizile1486
@mizile1486 10 ай бұрын
I know a kid who broke a long jump record for age 5. Very genetically gifted. He changed sports and switched to soccer. Almost 2 decades later, he's now the 2nd most expensive soccer player and recently won the champions league. If you haven't guessed his name by now, his name is Erling Haaland.
@PaulFilmer
@PaulFilmer 10 ай бұрын
I would say this occurs for 1 of 3 reason. 1. They burn out from all of the training and stress. 2. They change to another sport that is pays better. 3. They simply entered puberty early so when their peers caught up they fell off.
@phumkhmertv2028
@phumkhmertv2028 10 ай бұрын
Cocaine and alcohol.
@sitasin6545
@sitasin6545 10 ай бұрын
@@mizile1486 Yeah kinda crazy Haaland has the 5 year old record in the standing long jump. Also a standing long jump of 1.63m for a 5 year old is crazy
@celenial6009
@celenial6009 10 ай бұрын
@@PaulFilmer well also they could do other things besides sports
@Ben05866
@Ben05866 10 ай бұрын
andre cason who was a 100m phenom for usa back in the days is living and coaching in Thailand now for their national team, maybe boonson is getting some real good coaching from him
@threatened2024
@threatened2024 10 ай бұрын
Cason was the real deal, I bet he has a nice life there
@gothops2632
@gothops2632 10 ай бұрын
Is he back in Thailand? I thought he was coaching there years ago?
@edmondandrade3229
@edmondandrade3229 10 ай бұрын
Op
@TheHolladiewaldfeee
@TheHolladiewaldfeee 10 ай бұрын
@@edmondandrade3229 while the coaching is a big factor ofc, Boonson must have some crazy genes. In a region where genes are normaly not in your favor as a sprinter be this fast is crazy.
@Lorrieboi
@Lorrieboi 10 ай бұрын
@@TheHolladiewaldfeeeThai people are incredibly explosive
@gerhardstrydom5249
@gerhardstrydom5249 10 ай бұрын
Great vid!!👍👏
@sensational6210
@sensational6210 10 ай бұрын
Would love to see this kind of video for other events such as High jump!
@zbuilder4664
@zbuilder4664 10 ай бұрын
great video youre hella underrated (maybe for next video instead of fastest 100m its 200m?)
@harborwolf22
@harborwolf22 9 ай бұрын
Great video man, earned a sub. And you shouted out TRP!
@Scoupe400
@Scoupe400 8 ай бұрын
I never knew or thought about records per age. I remember seeing a lad younger than me (so had to be 13 or younger) run a 10.something and thinking he had that extra edge over the field. Just assumed he had trained and would go on to decent competitions. I knew I couldn’t have beaten him, and was running 400m that day which I won, but later that year I ran 11.2 in the 100 on grass - and I could only think back to that lad and be in awe of him and wondered if bothering to go training would’ve made a difference. Although I would’ve found it highly dull. Having said that, my strength was very short burst speed - ideal for my rugby and think it would’ve been better received if I had lived in the states. It’s like football/soccer. There were some truly talented lads at my school who would’ve just failed school and disappeared. When I went to collage I met a lad doing A-level PE and was an England player, yet he wasn’t as talented as those lads I once knew. He even asked me to go easy on him in his trials & demonstration assessment. It’s often about chance. Or who you know. I had it first hand at county trials for rugby. Was selected in the final roster after the trials; was asked my details, but then after seeing them huddle talking, they turned back and said technically I couldn’t play because I went to a school in the wrong location yet I lived in that county. Sure enough the next county never even let my try-out due to my home address. Some kid got lucky that day.
@renegadereturns
@renegadereturns 10 ай бұрын
thats a good video my friend
@JotimThingadane-eq3dt
@JotimThingadane-eq3dt 10 ай бұрын
Good analysis and really good food for thought coz I personally would always wonder as to what happens to these exceptional prospects
@richardsharp8276
@richardsharp8276 10 ай бұрын
I was the 1987 boys U12 South African 100m champion with a time of 12.3. This vid is not good for my ego hahaha
@justtestingonce
@justtestingonce 10 ай бұрын
You were running under apartheid against other slow white kinds.
@chomalen
@chomalen 10 ай бұрын
I left this comment on the Noah Lyles video on Total Running Productions site but it remains relevant to this video: 'His coach is on point and has the correct understanding. That training target below your current potential with a gradual close towards peak personal ability is the way to go. There is almost no point in forcing a teenage prodigy to push to their maximum ability at that age (for example). It is much more holistic and goal-oriented to sub-maximally develop and prime the machinery for that end-point to be attained when the physical form and neurodevelopment would support such an outcome. Sprinters usually achieve this between their mid-20s to early 30s. Prior to this, it serves near to no purpose to train and function close to your maximal output and inherently increases the risk of injury that would almost certainly reduce the upper limit of potential ability. Any Achilles' tendon rupture or hamstring tear would almost certainly reduce the output and result (sprint times, peak velocity) that could have been delivered otherwise. Often the hardest part is the psychological and mental reframing that is required in individuals who are so highly driven in such a pursuit. Sometimes, it can be to their detriment.' Young people should not be discouraged by their results or standing relative to others until the peak point of personal musculoskeletal, neurological and psychological development has passed. The curve of development and peak demonstrates a great degree of variation and the ultimate result is not reliably predicable with a great degree of confidence. If life provides a moment to reflect, it is that lesson that should be passed on the the younger peoples... keep pushing and don't look over the fence too much.
@rcc8506
@rcc8506 9 ай бұрын
You said it best. Very few people actually get it. Moderate to late bloomers often become the greatest because their bodies and minds have reached the point wherein they can take the maximum "load". In school I would come last in sprints but by end of college I was among the quickest and the fact is i DIDN'T train much.
@poluticon
@poluticon 9 ай бұрын
it's funny that a 14 year old boy can beat the Women's 100m world record.
@michaelnorman4
@michaelnorman4 10 ай бұрын
Great video
@NickHiltermann
@NickHiltermann 10 ай бұрын
I'm subscribing because you don't use those awful clickbait titles that TRP uses. Good video and keep it up!
@Ben05866
@Ben05866 10 ай бұрын
yeah please do more of them for events like 200 and 400, also mention the wind aided marks as well.
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 10 ай бұрын
Will do and I did, if I didn't say it was wind aided, it wasn't
@Ben05866
@Ben05866 10 ай бұрын
@@JumpmanTF you never went through the list of wind aided age records in the video, what do you mean?
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 10 ай бұрын
Sorry, I misunderstood! I'll try mention wind aided next time, unless it's too much work haha
@Ben05866
@Ben05866 10 ай бұрын
@@danielhobson2124 he has 3 of them from 17 - 19. it should be a good thing as it will make the video shorter and easier for him to make
@anthonychin3951
@anthonychin3951 10 ай бұрын
As a track junkie this was very refreshing 😊
@sprintspeedmedia
@sprintspeedmedia 10 ай бұрын
Nice video, it's interestig how many Asian sprinters hold records within their age class. I'm hoping Boonson can continue to develop his speed.
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 10 ай бұрын
Big fan of boonson, he's had a weird 2023 though. Dude I love your channel, been a sub for a long time now!
@captainamericaamerica8090
@captainamericaamerica8090 10 ай бұрын
THEY CAN'T MAKE THE NUMBER 1 LIST = WORLD'S BEST! FAST YES, BUT NOT THE FASTEST
@sprintspeedmedia
@sprintspeedmedia 10 ай бұрын
@@JumpmanTF Awesome to hear that! good luck with your channel.
@user-vm4ni4vo4e
@user-vm4ni4vo4e 10 ай бұрын
He's always been injured this year and last month. But now he's starting to come back strong again.from Thai fan
@minavamp2811
@minavamp2811 10 ай бұрын
@@captainamericaamerica8090 genetically it's not possible for Asians to be the fastest runners. it's just like black swimmers will not be the fastest swimmers.
@Johnrap
@Johnrap 10 ай бұрын
I believe I was your 36th subscriber last week, now you're over 100 this week. I was one of Jared Owen's first 100 subscribers. Hopefully you are as successful as him. It seems like you will be. For example, this video is awesome.
@BillyBob-wh4sq
@BillyBob-wh4sq 10 ай бұрын
I had no idea Nyckoles Harbor held age group world records, but I am also not that surprised. He truly is a beast, and you didn't even mention his best (imo) performance -- he ran 20.7 for 200m indoors with no blocks!
@dennisrobinson8008
@dennisrobinson8008 7 ай бұрын
At 240lbs
@dennisrobinson8008
@dennisrobinson8008 5 ай бұрын
That's a huge dude to be running that fast especially in the 200m! Imagine if he was a track body size!
@djdiggerjonez4063
@djdiggerjonez4063 9 ай бұрын
I'm glad you understand the Bromell Situation.
@david2804me
@david2804me 4 ай бұрын
It's often just down to the rate at which some boys mature physically towards adolescence versus the majority. Simple example, at 11, I was the fastest over 100m in my year at school...but the following year, I was overtaken by two other boys both of whom had by then started to sprout facial hair etc when I was still waiting for the first hair under an armpit and elsewhere haha. This difference in growth rate is why the vast majority of child prodigies in sport exist and why they then disappear again when adolescence catches up for everyone and the playing field is levelled out again. It is only then that one can really see who the most talented are.
@JaemanEdwards
@JaemanEdwards 8 ай бұрын
I remember at high school in New Zealand, one of our boys ran 11 sec flat. We were all amazed at that.
@ericsmith1453
@ericsmith1453 Ай бұрын
I was told by a athlete who competed in his country's national team as a hammer thrower that the average time in which a athlete can reach top performance is 5 years, so if you perform well as a junior your peak performance abilities may be over once you reach senior level
@runninggirl2765
@runninggirl2765 6 ай бұрын
What a unique idea for a video. I have always wondered about age-group winners and whether they kept running. Great job!! Now, how about the girls??
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 6 ай бұрын
I already made it. Haha.
@squashduos1258
@squashduos1258 10 ай бұрын
Don’t take this the wrong way but I totally love this 70s style of production!! Sound, font and framing! Keep it coming!
@carinahorn791
@carinahorn791 10 ай бұрын
very interesting video
@supersubzero
@supersubzero 10 ай бұрын
I peaked in high jump in the 10th grade at 6"5' and my 12th grade yr I couldn't clear 6"4". I was pretty heart breaking my senior year considering I thought I would be Jumping 7"0" by then but it didn't turn out like that even though its still my high schools sophomore HJ record it still bothers be 23 years later.
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 10 ай бұрын
Lots of factors to consider. Jumping that high that young, if you had been led down the correct path I'm sure you could have got 7 foot. Awesome to still hold a record tho!
@samothemano
@samothemano 10 ай бұрын
My high jump journey was similar. I jumped 1.8m at the age of 15 and then just stalled and even started to regress. Gave it up not long after.
@supersubzero
@supersubzero 10 ай бұрын
@@samothemano Peaking early is a hard pill to swallow I am sorry you had to go through that hope you were able to get over it because must of us don't.
@samothemano
@samothemano 10 ай бұрын
@@supersubzero it wasn’t that thought tbh. I found high jump a very lonely sport. And I was never under any illusion that I was ever going to be the best of the best. I was a good high jumper but not elite. So when I gave it up, I started playing rugby and found a team sport that I really excelled and had a great time playing.
@2DarkHorizon
@2DarkHorizon 10 ай бұрын
@@samothemano Most track and field sports is like 90 percent physical 10 percent mental. People like you to believe it is mostly mental but that isn't the case. That is why there are weight classes in boxing. Alot of track and field is like this you just need to have the talent and work hard.
@djdiggerjonez4063
@djdiggerjonez4063 9 ай бұрын
Willie Washington is now a NCAA shot put athlete.
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 9 ай бұрын
Different guy I'm certain
@superiagamingforlife
@superiagamingforlife 10 ай бұрын
I am 11. I set silver in my country's U12 race at age 10 scoring 12.24s at finals which was my PR... But now at age 11 I qualified again for my country striking bronze in 11-12 year old racing, me scoring 12.1 sharp which I had my PR up by 0.14s which was amazing! I felt shocked and proud for myself to get 3rd, 1st place scoring 12.06s which was like a fifth of a step ahead of me.
@LucidResinArt
@LucidResinArt 10 ай бұрын
Good
@-guitarhero
@-guitarhero 10 ай бұрын
congrats on this vid blowing up lol
@westcoast1133
@westcoast1133 2 ай бұрын
Trinidad in the house thank you bro,,
@wesleyrowland344
@wesleyrowland344 10 ай бұрын
Amazing
@eqeeqeqeqeeqeqeq6696
@eqeeqeqeqeeqeqeq6696 9 ай бұрын
I am three and a half years old right now and I managed to get my first sub 7 second time on 100m. It was unofficial though, because the person who clocked the time was busy looking for boogers in his nose. But i swear on my albino Tiger that its a true story and I just lost the Guinness paper where it says WORLD RECORD. I also played THE FLASH in the TV series because of it. That way they didnt had to use special effects. Its really true and it happened.
@ppsuk099
@ppsuk099 9 ай бұрын
2 years ago i started doing track and ran 12.89 at 12yrs without blocks now im 14 and run 11.9 no blocks and im hoping to improve alot as i had to miss out when i was 13 due to moving
@michaelchampion936
@michaelchampion936 8 ай бұрын
I remeber back in the days I ran against kids who were winning medals at the national schools comps and world youth games, they were amazing as youngsters and also very well developed for their age. When we hit the junior ranks going into adults others started to catch up with them physically. Now most of the best dropped out of sport altogether, whereas the one whobwere just behind them carried on and made it to the top. I've wondered if this was as the best kids were there due to early development and did not need to put in the hard work to be great, and when other caught up they didn't have what it took to carry on amd put in the hard work.
@user-zp7jp1vk2i
@user-zp7jp1vk2i 8 ай бұрын
the ones who had to work at it wanted it more. we had a freshman, very fast, score three touchdowns his first Varisty game, then by being a sophomore I never saw him again.
@gracieswildadventures9238
@gracieswildadventures9238 Ай бұрын
Amazing! Did they develop early, or were they older than believed?
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF Ай бұрын
Early of course, the true anomalies
@rowland5951
@rowland5951 10 ай бұрын
KZfaq gods at work.
@SpiritSlayer1
@SpiritSlayer1 8 ай бұрын
647,753 views, 5.3k likes, 497 comments, 1.85k subscribers. Nice!!
@scottbeesley894
@scottbeesley894 8 ай бұрын
You should do the same for the 5k. My 6 year old comes to parkrun with me most Saturday’s. I thought he did exceptionally well with a PB of 28:55, beating a lot of the adults. But then I looked up the record. A 6 year old managed to go sub 20 mins in the 5k!
@petergianakopoulos4926
@petergianakopoulos4926 8 ай бұрын
No one cares about 5k.
@scottbeesley894
@scottbeesley894 8 ай бұрын
@@petergianakopoulos4926 I went to school with a guy who had a last name like yours, he was Greek. Are you Greek? I'd love to go there some day.
@gruuubert
@gruuubert 8 ай бұрын
@@petergianakopoulos4926 many people care about 5k
@petergianakopoulos4926
@petergianakopoulos4926 8 ай бұрын
@scottbeesley894 yeah dude it's lovely just July August you might not be able to take the heat ... I ran 5k today fyi
@oyuyuy
@oyuyuy 8 ай бұрын
@@petergianakopoulos4926 No one cares that you ran 5k.
@cowzg0moo
@cowzg0moo Ай бұрын
I was a huge ninja warrior fan growing up as a kid, there was always a few elite contendors that would make reapparances on the show in hopes of becoming the next ninja warrior. One of the athletes that i still remember despite it being like 15 hears was a gas station worker named shingo yamamoto. Was really hoping the one mentioned in the video wad the same one but it seems unlikely
@gothops2632
@gothops2632 10 ай бұрын
The VAST majority of teenage star sprinters do not become senior star sprinters. Only a very small minority of champion teenage sprinters have gone on to make an Olympic final. Ato Boldon has spoken about this subject many times.
@y0Fusionn
@y0Fusionn 10 ай бұрын
I agree. It comes down to having all the variables in check, good coaching, nutrition, talent, and staying injury free. Even then your chances are still slim
@therubikscubedude
@therubikscubedude 10 ай бұрын
There was a kid that used to go to my school named Maenda Maenda (goes by Andrew Maenda) who claimed to be the fastest juvenile sprinter in Australia with a 100M dash time of 11.10 seconds
@henlo9543
@henlo9543 10 ай бұрын
Could you do one for the 60 meters or 80 Aswell bcs I only started running 100m at 13 year old before we did 80 or 60 in our country
@threatened2024
@threatened2024 10 ай бұрын
Those times are absolutely dizzying!
@superiagamingforlife
@superiagamingforlife 10 ай бұрын
When I was 10, I am 11 now. I ran 12.26s, which was the 2nd highest in my country. I qualified for my region and in the 100m sprints finals, I ran 12.24s which set my 10yo PR by 0.02s which is still amazing and I won Silver in my country. 1st place coming in at 12.2s sharp.
@y-sdahms212
@y-sdahms212 8 ай бұрын
🪈
@superiagamingforlife
@superiagamingforlife 8 ай бұрын
@@y-sdahms212 is true
@Wesz808
@Wesz808 8 ай бұрын
Currently i'm an ultrarunner but as a kid until i was 17 I played table tennis on a high level. Sometimes we had to compete against Chinese and Russian kids in tournaments. They were much better at a younger age. This has a lot to do with the culture they grew up in and doesn't say much on how good they will be when they're adults. (I once played a tournament where the Russian kids didn't get to eat that night if they lost against one of our players). In the West and especially Western-Europe sports federations are far more careful when it comes to young talents. Don't bring them too early! Probably the lesson we've learned from Eastern Germany.
@bilstrum
@bilstrum 9 ай бұрын
10.82 is crazy at 13 holy crap ! i was a sprinter in melbourne aus most of my childhood and teens . my p.b in my last 100m ran when i was 18 was a 10.93 thats my greatest sporting achievement by far , completely clowned by a 13 year old
@Qlicky
@Qlicky 7 ай бұрын
I could run something little under 12s when I was in primary school (12-14 years old) without coaching. Was also competing in long jump and shot put, winning many tournaments for my school without professional training or a coach. I just liked to run, jump over stuff and throw things. Volleyball and Basketball teams captain as well. Then I went to a private school on the other side of the country, didnt have time to jump around and run all day, but continued to eat 5 meals a day... I put on like 17KGs of weight in 3 months and the rest is history...
@outsiderunner
@outsiderunner 10 ай бұрын
great performance
@oofamism
@oofamism 10 ай бұрын
I was not expecting Thailand in there at all. What a pleasant surprise that came out of my home country!
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 10 ай бұрын
keep an eye on him and give him your support, he's truly an astounding athlete!
@marshy25
@marshy25 9 ай бұрын
Could you do the 400m?
@AimRobot
@AimRobot 9 ай бұрын
1:07 Do many runners place their feet sideways when running ?
@aflyingmermaid5764
@aflyingmermaid5764 10 ай бұрын
I think a video in pole vault would be super interesting (guess who basically all of them are?)
@Totallyasigmamale
@Totallyasigmamale 6 ай бұрын
You should do some about 11 and 12 year olds, I'm friends with a kid named Gunner Hammet he's broken 3 national records a cool kid really. We play on the same football team and he indeed is one of our star players.
@johnboyhowell
@johnboyhowell 8 ай бұрын
Where do you find the WR for each age? I’d love to know the mile records by age. Can a recreational 40 year old runner match the world mile record for an 80 year old?
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 8 ай бұрын
If you google enough you'd probably find masters and each individual age. The list I use is ages 5-20.
@bentencho
@bentencho 8 ай бұрын
I always wondered how kids actually get scouted. I was a quick lad back in 7th/8th grade.... I remember chatting with a classmate who ran sub-11 seconds at age 12/13 and how he needs to train, go to competitions, etc. During PE class, we're always about neck-to-neck... but I never trained. I spent my after-school at my buddies playing N64 or Starcraft. I wonder how many other top-tiered athletes are out there who just were never noticed, never given a chance, or just fell through the cracks.
@BobCharlton
@BobCharlton 8 ай бұрын
Starcraft > running. You probably a very successful in your career so you did the right thing
@richgl31
@richgl31 8 ай бұрын
I think being part of an athletics club is the way to start. There will be those that don’t have access- but most of is in the western world will be able to find a way if we have the determination.
@misterfox8061
@misterfox8061 6 ай бұрын
wouldn't sub 11 at 12 be wr lol
@lee4171
@lee4171 Ай бұрын
In 1985, I was running 12.46 aged 14 at 5' 2". The times these guys run is crazy. I'm 53 now and running mid 14s. BUT 5' 5" !
@Shoukthik
@Shoukthik 7 ай бұрын
Did any one observe that audio and video not showing same person?
@explorerjlc1743
@explorerjlc1743 9 ай бұрын
I did 12.46 at 14 and thought that was good... These guys are on a totally different level!
@nocturne6291
@nocturne6291 8 ай бұрын
If you run under 14sec at this age this mean that you are verry fast
@explorerjlc1743
@explorerjlc1743 8 ай бұрын
@@nocturne6291 yeah I was the fastest in my year group. But got slower quickly when I stopped exercising as much lol
@thejourney6712
@thejourney6712 10 ай бұрын
Darril brown's career was held back alot by injuries.
@YuckiDude
@YuckiDude 10 ай бұрын
Insane
@jujucasar2003
@jujucasar2003 9 ай бұрын
I played soccer with a kid named Anton Jamir. I was a mid distance runner and always thought i was a mediocre sprinter cuz id just get matched up vs him losing to him by significant margins. But after seeing that he ran a 10.2 sec 100m and my pr was 11.5 secs I didnt feel as bad. I felt he shoulda made it to the olympics but he just kinda vanished off after HS 2003.
@oliveoil3917
@oliveoil3917 8 ай бұрын
He got shot r.i p
@user-zp7jp1vk2i
@user-zp7jp1vk2i 8 ай бұрын
@@oliveoil3917 what COUNTRY???
@jujucasar2003
@jujucasar2003 7 ай бұрын
He was just a black kid from the US. No idea y he dindt go pro with a 10.2 100m in HS.
@davel6623
@davel6623 4 ай бұрын
His best time in HS was 10.65 per easy Google search. There was a kid from my HS who went to school with my niece who was running 47s in the 400 but I think had issues. He was a beast as a RB also. He didn't do anything with it. Could have got a full ride with that talent.
@stevenmichienzi9833
@stevenmichienzi9833 9 ай бұрын
you should update the list, the two fastest under-20 athletes are Letsile Tebogo who ran in 9.91 in 2022 and Issam Asinga in 9.89, under-20 world record and also South American record
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 9 ай бұрын
One day, when more records change, can't really update a video once it's out.
@atikameg73
@atikameg73 9 ай бұрын
I coached sprinters for many years, and I always said I did not care who the fastest 15 year olds were, because the kids who are just starting to hit their stride at 18 are statistically superior over the long term. Fred Kerley, anyone?
@owensantos8672
@owensantos8672 10 ай бұрын
You should do this style of video again, but with 800m or 1600m instead
@dennisrobinson8008
@dennisrobinson8008 5 ай бұрын
Exciting discussion! Basically a majority of the BEST are in track clubs, so they train almost year round and getting exposure to high quality coaching and competition. So they can advance between seasons versus those who only run during the season. Many of the best also started REALLY young! I'm following a 400m runner whose now a Freshman in College and she's been in a track club since 2nd grade! On the one coach that said most men could make better than 11.00 seconds if they trained fully for it. Perhaps not in one year, but i suspect in 2-4 years depending upon their athleticism and build they could get there with excellent coaching and strength training. They won't be elite, but they can make it into the 10's. So if you are fat, you would lose the weight and get it close to a track body for your height. You would have your body fat down 5-9%. You would have a strong core. You would have good strength for your weight as evidenced by a 2-3x body weight squats and a 1.5-2x body weight power cleans. Your vertical jump would be over 34" and if it currently is not you would start working on it. ( See Isaiah Rivera for his jumping program that took him from barely 24" to 50.5" in 4 years and he could've done it in 2 if he knew everything knows now ). So guys are getting on all this "genetics" and fast twitch fibre thing. Even Christian Coleman started out as a strong skinny dude and ran 11.8 his first year as a Sophomore. So that means he likely started in the 12's just like many other strong skinny dudes. As a Junior it was 10.92 and a Sr it was 10.29. Those time drops lead me to believe he worked on it 6+ months out of the year. Asafa Powell who has sub 9.90 with JA also had similar time drops of 11.9 his first year and took 2 years to make 10.5 seconds, and then got into a good club and the time drop to 10.2 and 10.0. The story is out there somewhere. Then the incredible youth athletes who gave it it up... Well they stopped running and playing and lost quite a bit of their speed, but if they got back into it and trained for a year, getting their body built right they would be pretty good. Then they could do it again for another few years. But anyway basically the best are in track clubs. Power and speed ARE coach able. It's a known fact now. You might not make it to the elite level, but if you are willing to put in the work you could be in the upper 10-20% of speed. Basically you make a start at it by cutting out any excuses, fully committing and putting in the work.
@feelincrispy7053
@feelincrispy7053 8 ай бұрын
Would have been cool to see overlay comparisons of all age groups together. Eg.age 8 vs age 12 vs age 16 ect Seeing a 12 year old 1 second behind a 18 year old would have given some real perspective. Still a good video though
@randar1969
@randar1969 8 ай бұрын
I got cripple when i was 6 weeks old due to braininjury cut the connection to my upper leg muscles. Took me 19 years just to walk. But i am pretty sure i trained more then most professional athletes. Being able to walk without help or devices is one hell of a motivator. But if you don't mind i pass when it comes to walking records..
@farknfreakn9316
@farknfreakn9316 8 ай бұрын
I've held my high school 15 yo discus record (1kg/2.2lb) at 51.04 m since 1986 . What's sad is that the younger gen haven't beaten that as records are meant to be broken . It bugs me that it still stands because some seriously talented prospects aren't involved in sport these days .
@gibranvazquez5976
@gibranvazquez5976 8 ай бұрын
51 is a decent record for a specific high school. It's going to be tough to break.
@KX5Kat
@KX5Kat 10 ай бұрын
My coach, who has trained track athletes for nearly 30yrs, is convinced that even relatively 'average' genetics can get a male running 100m in under 11sec. Most of it comes down to hard work, proper training and staying injury free, not genetics. The thing to remember with these kids is that, initially, they were untrained and competed against other untrained kids their age. This means that genetics would be a bigger deciding factor. Their genetic potential was therefore noticed and they kept being trained and coached, making their times improve even more.
@IronArmPanda
@IronArmPanda 10 ай бұрын
I was running a 12 flat at 6'4" 270 first year of track during my junior year of high school. Being I had just lost 70lbs and had only really just begun my journey into fitness over the course of a year, it was a big boost to keep pushing. People definitely have it in them to do wayyy more than they think they can.
@y0Fusionn
@y0Fusionn 10 ай бұрын
I’m sorry but your coach is lying to you… Sprinting is 90% genetic, any sprinter at international will tell you they were the fastest in there class before even training. You have to have the fast twitch type 2b fibres already there
@heightdevil
@heightdevil 10 ай бұрын
​@@y0Fusionnyou can change the ratio of your fibers though with training. I think you're seriously underestimating how many people (kids included) shoot themselves in the foot by just not moving a lot throughout their day. That complete lack of activity outside of workouts can make it seem like you have bad genetics.
@y0Fusionn
@y0Fusionn 10 ай бұрын
@@heightdevil You can change the ratio but only to a certain degree. Sprinters have a gene which only a small amount of the population have. Someone with that gene who trains hard is smoking someone who trains without that gene any day of the week
@KX5Kat
@KX5Kat 10 ай бұрын
@@y0Fusionn That’s a common misconception and here’s why you’re mistaken. At school level, most kids haven’t had any track training and when they compete at compulsory school sport’s days, since none of the kids have had any training genetics will be what decides the results not training. The genetically gifted kids will go on to get noticed, join the track team and that perpetuates the myth that genetics is the main factor as most of the kids on the track team have great genetics and were “scouted”. No kid joins the track team because it sounds fun. At the elite level, you’re talking times of under 10.3. Training is 90%, genetics is 10%. It’s now the reverse of school days; all sprinters on the field have had the very best training and coaching (this gets them well under 11sec) and now the difference between sprinters is going to be in other factors such as genetics, mental focus, level of injury etc. It’s at the elite level (sub 10.3), where genetics really matters. The type 2b fast twitch muscle fibres argument isn’t as simple as you say. For the record, I have a massive broad jump (just over 3m) and a vert jump close to 80cm. This was from a vert of barely 50cm and broad of barely 260cm a few years ago. I improved dramatically with years of plyometrics and sprints. I have no shortage of type 2b fibres. Despite this, my 100m times aren’t reflecting it and my coach and I have discovered it’s because of poor speed endurance and faulty acceleration technique. I’m working on these and my times are dropping. You’re also not taking into account that some kids just happen to sprint with really good technique, before having had a single training session whereas others have to learn proper technique. This goes into biomechanics, but at the end of the day speed is a skill and 90% of that skill can be learned, practiced and developed. So, training can get almost any guy to around 10.8sec. From there, everything needs to go next level.
@namesake7139
@namesake7139 10 ай бұрын
Youth phenoms power to weight ratio is very high. It's hard to maintain that because theirs is so out of balance. Wear and tear and maintaining that power while gaining weight asking with motivation can be daunting
@kairo8155
@kairo8155 8 ай бұрын
i Got 2 silver medals in national competitions when i was 10-11 in Hurdles. 2 years later, i could not even qualify for the same event.
@SilencedButNotForgotten
@SilencedButNotForgotten 10 ай бұрын
Puripol is SO GOOD!
@w1s86
@w1s86 10 ай бұрын
He's been plagued by injury since running 10.09 at the U20 late last year. Probably pushed himself beyond his limits and suffered for it. Seems to have recovered now though, judging from his performance in the Asian Championships 4x100 relay July 12.
@qitarabeaupierre4551
@qitarabeaupierre4551 8 ай бұрын
Trinidad and tobago, my sister countries, proud of yall
@Dellerss
@Dellerss 9 ай бұрын
A 6 year old being faster than I've ever been. That is insane. I'm certainly not fast when it comes to speed, but considering my size it just sounds insane for any 6 year old to be faster.
@Blkcoco
@Blkcoco 2 ай бұрын
This needs an update asap😂
@JumpmanTF
@JumpmanTF 2 ай бұрын
A few changes haha
@kaymeddings4162
@kaymeddings4162 Ай бұрын
One thing that happens, often, is that the kids who were winning easily earlier on find it hard to cope when people they used to beat are now catching up.
@iiibjlll
@iiibjlll 9 ай бұрын
Anyone who has done Track events professionally know the largest determining factor later on is a well-designed, quality doping programme. Always has been since the 1980s.
@user-mp9kb9vd4b
@user-mp9kb9vd4b 10 ай бұрын
William Obea Moore was running 45.8 n 20.8 at 17-18yrs
@y0Fusionn
@y0Fusionn 10 ай бұрын
As a previous high level sprinter. I can tell you that the percentage of becoming a professional is so low. Many people have the talent but the problem is a lot of people peak at 15,16. They get injuries, mix with the wrong people or don’t take training serious enough. In order to make it you need to have all of the variables in check and keep yourself injury free as long as possible. Soon as you get one you are never the same
@pingu6028
@pingu6028 8 ай бұрын
also you dont really get enough money unless you are at the very top. Most guys just change sports
@gibbleway
@gibbleway 8 ай бұрын
Bromell was the most consistent 9.83s 100m adult sprinter ever.
@cinnamonstar808
@cinnamonstar808 10 ай бұрын
Track & Field wore down the body. walking and running follows you home :O) Sports that use equipment or ball; the activities stop outside practice. those muscle groups get a small break.
2.46m. The History of the Human Jump Limit.
17:54
Jumpman
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
Sigma Girl Education #sigma #viral #comedy
00:16
CRAZY GREAPA
Рет қаралды 2,7 МЛН
The World's Fastest Cleaners
00:35
MrBeast
Рет қаралды 159 МЛН
Маленькая и средняя фанта
00:56
Multi DO Smile Russian
Рет қаралды 3,8 МЛН
Como ela fez isso? 😲
00:12
Los Wagners
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
Kids On Another Level...
11:58
Trend Central
Рет қаралды 4,6 МЛН
Funniest Moments in Football
14:02
WOW FOOTBALL
Рет қаралды 71 М.
This High Schooler Just Broke 10 Seconds
11:04
Jumpman
Рет қаралды 243 М.
These Dogs Can Run Faster Than Usain Bolt
7:37
ViralBe
Рет қаралды 11 МЛН
Every 100m World Lead Since 2008.
5:10
Jumpman
Рет қаралды 540 М.
Can 10 Average Runners Break The Marathon World Record?
13:40
Lachlan Earnshaw
Рет қаралды 461 М.
Who Has the Best Sprinting Form Ever?
16:39
Sprint Speed Media
Рет қаралды 181 М.
This Will NEVER Happen Again! || THE ICONIC WORLD RECORD FROM THE G.O.A.T
16:47
Total Running Productions
Рет қаралды 26 МЛН
БОЙ: Тайсон Фьюри - Александр Усик | Бокс
4:32
REAL vs CITY 2024 #shorts #realmadrid #manchestercity #championsleague
0:12
kid ronaldinho vs kid haaland ☠️ #shorts #football
0:20
Foul
Рет қаралды 2,8 МЛН
Disrespectful Moments 😫
0:28
Foot Mood
Рет қаралды 9 МЛН