Now that Gout is 18, this yearโs World Under-20โs โ previously called the World Juniors โ will be his last chance to compete at the event, and potentially win an individual gold in the 100m or 200m, something no Australian has done before.
โWe want him to be running in his late 20s, so you donโt want to push the boundaries too soon โฆ itโs just the fact they (the Commonwealth Games and World Under-20s) are so close together,โ his coach Di Sheppard said.
For Gout, the excitement has not dulled since he burst onto the scene as a schoolboy in Brisbane 18 months ago at the All Schools championships, when he ran a personal best time of 10.04s for the 100m with an illegal wind. He then ran a legal 10.17 and broke the Australian under-18 record in the final.
The next day, in the 200m final, he ran 20.04 seconds. It was the second-fastest run ever recorded by an athlete before their 18th birthday, behind only Erriyon Knighton, and quicker than Usain Bolt ran at the same age. His time also broke Peter Normanโs long-standing open-age Australian record, which was set at the Mexico Olympics when he won silver.
Last year, Gout made the semi-final of the 200m at the Tokyo World Championships.
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His goals beyond Eugene, Oregon, for the World Under-20โs in August are all centred on major world meets, particularly the LA and Brisbane Olympics.
โLA in two years time, then hopefully Brisbane in 2032. Iโll be 24 turning 25. Prime time,โ Gout said.
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