Gout does it again: Teen blitzes field in 200m races

Gout does it again: Teen blitzes field in 200m races

First Gout Gout proved his record-breaking 200-metre run last year was no fluke by doing it again.

Then he broke 20 seconds in the 200m for the first time.

Gout Gout celebrates with coach Di Sheppard.Credit: Getty Images

Gout starred at the Queensland Athletics Championships on Sunday, cruising through his under-20s heat in 20.05s and then storming to victory in the final with a wind-assisted 19.98s.

Unfortunately, his sub-20 run won’t count because he had an illegally strong tailwind (+3.6 metres/second). But his 20.05s for the 200m certainly stands.

If Gout hadn’t already broken Peter Norman’s long-standing 200m record last year, then he would have broken it on Sunday in his heat.

Gout now has the two quickest times by an Australian man, ever. And he’s not yet a man.

Gout’s 20.05s was just 0.01s slower than his national record (20.04s) set in December last year when he broke Norman’s long-standing record of 20.06s at the 1968 Mexico Olympics.

It is also the quickest 200m time in the world this year, albeit it is still out of season for most of the rest of the world.

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To make the performance more impressive, Gout was effectively racing himself. He won the race by more than 30m (second place ran 22.22s) so was far from being pushed to run a quick time. It was legal wind of +1.2 metres/second.

Both performances on Sunday are big statements about where the year 12 Ipswich schoolboy is at.

The first legal run in the 200m heat reaffirms the idea that his record-breaking performance at All-Schools last year was not a one-off, and he is backing it up with consistently quick times.

While the time from his sub-20s run in the final won’t be recognised due to the illegal tailwind, it will confirm in his mind he can roll his legs through fast enough to get him down the track in under 20 seconds.

Gout also said that his coach Di Sheppard had him in a heavy training load at the moment, building towards the upcoming Maurie Plant meet in Melbourne.

The context of Gout’s record-breaking run in December was that it was quicker than Usain Bolt ran the 200m at the same age.

Meanwhile, Olympic 100m semi-finalist Rohan Browning suggested he is returning to his best form after a long period battling a chronic knee problem, running a sharp 10.12 seconds in the 100m – his best performance to open a season.

“I think I’m the healthiest I’ve ever been, I feel really robust, able to run around, and now I’m looking forward to the crown jewels of the domestic season,” the 27-year-old said.

“I didn’t want to run until I was ready to run quick. It was rusty but the landscape has changed so much. (Lachie) Kennedy, Gout, Josh Azzopardi (have emerged) but I think I have some life left in me.”

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