'Most impressive athletic feat ever': 16-year-old Texan sets world record in 800 meters
Cooper Lutkenhaus, an incoming junior at Northwest High School in Justin, Texas, was so impressive in setting an age-group world record at the U.S. Track & Field Championships on Sunday that a respected distance running coach and author declared it was "the most impressive athletic feat in history."
In a social media post, Steve Magness, who wrote "The Science of Running," said Lutkenhaus' performance that included passing three of the nation's fastest men in an electrifying stretch run "makes high school LeBron look like nobody.
"Cooper Lutkenhaus, take a bow."
Current Lakers star LeBron James, of course, was a prodigy on the basketball court at St. Vincent–St. Mary High School in Akron, Ohio, and went straight to the NBA upon graduating in 2003.
Lutkenhaus, 16, won't be in school for long, either. He will become the youngest American to compete in the World Athletics Championships when he travels to Tokyo on Sept. 13-21. This time he'll have no age-group restriction, not after posting the fourth-best time in U.S. history (1:42.27) and nearly catching 800-meter champion Donavan Brazier (1:42.16).
In the waning seconds, Lutkenhaus turned on the jets, going from seventh to second place while passing reigning indoor 800 meter world champion Josh Hoey as well as Olympians Brandon Miller and Bryce Hoppel, all of whom were clustered with Brazier at the front.
Lutkenhaus' time was the fastest ever for a runner under 18.
"I saw someone coming up and I was like, 'Dang, this could be the high schooler,' " Brazier told reporters. "This kid's phenomenal. I'm glad that I'm 28 and maybe have a few more years left in me, hopefully won't have to deal with him in his prime because that dude is definitely special."
Does wunderkind describe Lutkenhaus? He's only been running track for three years, and he said his strategy of accelerating over the last quarter of the race was crafted in middle school.
"I've always kind of had a natural spot with 200 [meters] to go," Lutkenhaus told reporters. "Ever since middle school that's kind of been the spot I've really pushed from. Kind of just decided to go back to middle school tactics with 200 to go and really just give everything I had left."
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Less surprising was a late surge by Noah Lyles in the 200 meters that enabled him to pass Kenny Bednarek en route to a world-leading time of 19.63. Lyles might have challenged his personal best American record of 19.31, but as he passed Bednarek with five meters remaining he turned his head and stared down his competitor.
Bednarek retaliated, giving Lyles a shove before they shook hands. Afterward, Bednarek shrugged and chalked up the incident to "Noah is gonna be Noah."
"If he wants to stare me down, that's fine,' Bednarek said. 'I'm very confident I can beat him. What he said doesn't matter. It's just what he did. It's unsportsmanlike [crap] and I don't deal with that.'
More drama occurred before championships when Sha'Carri Richardson was arrested and charged with fourth-degree domestic violence a week ago at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, according to a police report.
The reigning 100-meter world champion was charged with assaulting her boyfriend, sprinter Christian Coleman, as the couple were going through security. A police officer reviewed camera footage and observed Richardson grab Coleman's backpack and yank it away, the report said.
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Coleman tried to step around Richardson and she pushed him into a wall. Later she appeared to throw headphones at him.
In the report, however, the officer indicated that Colemen "did not want to participate any further in the investigation and declined to be a victim.'
Coleman defended Richardson when asked about the incident at the championships.
'She just has a lot of things going on, a lot of emotions and forces going on inside of her that not only I can't understand, but nobody can," he said. "Because she's one of one.… I know that it's been a tough journey for her this year. But she's going to bounce back.
"Like I said, I see it every day. She's the best female athlete in the world, and she's going to be just fine. She's going to be good. I'm going to be good, too.'
Once the racing took place, attention turned to Lutkenhaus. His time bettered the the U18 world record — set by Timothy Kitum of Kenya at the 2012 London Olympics — by 1.1 seconds.
"It is the most mind blowing HS performance in history," Magness wrote on X. "Any high school phenom in history you can think of? This kid is better. I never thought we'd supplant Jim Ryun as the HS runner GOAT, but a sophomore in HS just did."
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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