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Gout is a 17-year-old sprint sensation from Australia, whose blistering 100m and 200m times have drawn comparison to none other than Jamaican sprint legend Usain Bolt.
In a seven-month period since last August, Gout has:
- Won silver in the 200m at the World Junior Championships (20.60 seconds, -0.7 metres/second wind)
- Broken Peter Norman’s long-standing Australian 200m record (20.04 seconds, +1.5m/s)
- Two weeks ago in Brisbane, smashed through the magical 20-second barrier for the 200m, recording a world-leading 19.98 seconds (+3.6m/s), albeit wind-aided (anything greater than 2.0 metres/second is considered wind-aided).
Let’s dive into the science.
The science of sprinting
Yet, his performances suggest he is redefining the archetype of elite sprinting.

Gout Gout of Australia celebrates winning the U18s, 100m final during the Australian All Schools Athletics Championships at Queensland Sport and Athletics Centre in Brisbane, 6 December, 2024. Source: AAP / Jono Searle
For anyone who has run at school, you know the difficulty of holding your top speed for the duration of a 200-metre race.
This statistic puts Gout in elite company.
The magic of Gout
However, there is a trade-off with step length and step frequency.
Longer Achilles tendon length and stiffness play a huge role in sprint efficiency. This allows athletes to move at faster speeds for longer periods at a reduced energy cost, and may be another one’s of Gout advantages over his contemporaries.
A bright future
