8 of the Fastest High School 100 meter times ever

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2014-04-27に共有
These are the 8 fastest high school 100 meter races (times) ever recorded. Some things to keep in mind: I did not add any times without videos. Some of these races are from the summer of the sprinters senior year (18 years old). Wind aided times are included.

コメント (21)
  • @Satch__
    Matthew boling just ran 9.98 an hour ago
  • Apparently everyone in this comment section holds a world record lol
  • This dude at my school ran a 10.74 then got caught sleeping with a teacher and lost all his scholarships
  • @moosnum2
    I was there when Bromell ran that 9.99 at the Great Southwest in 2013. It was something else... Never thought I'd get to see a sub-10 100m in my life. It's just a shame it was so wind-aided.
  • And now Matt Bolin is just on another level. White boy can absolutely fly!!
  • @nandc2009
    the wind in the last clip is practically gale-force
  • @Danzii
    Matthew Boling ran a 9.98 HS on 27th April 2019
  • This #1 is about to get switched, Mathew boling from Texas just ran a 9.98 today!!!
  • @Frankers5
    Matt Boling from Jesuit High School ran 9.98 this year.
  • Mathew Boiling ran a 9.98 with 4.2 wind aided in 2019
  • Roy Chester Martin Jr. (born December 25, 1966) is a former American sprinter. He is considered one of the greatest high school sprinters in American history,[1][2][3] and at the height of his career, he competed for the United States at the 1988 Summer Olympics.[4] As a high school senior in 1985, Martin set the National High School Record for 200 meters with a time of 20.13 seconds at the 1985 UIL Track and Field Championships in Austin. That same year, he also recorded the fastest prep time in the nation for 100 meters at 10.18 seconds and anchored his high school's 4×100 meter and 4×400 meter relay teams to marks (40.28 in the 4×100 and 3:09.4 in the 4×400) that are among the fastest ever recorded in high school competition. Martin was named Male Prep Athlete of the Year by Track & Field News in 1984 and in 1985 and was ranked #3 in the world at 200 meters as a high school senior.[5][6] His national record for 200 meters stood until July 9, 2016, when it was surpassed by Noah Lyles.[3] “ There has never been one like him in high school. Carl Lewis, Michael Johnson, nobody. ” — Earnest James, Martin’s coach at Dallas Roosevelt.[4] Martin was born and raised in Dallas, Texas. As a boy, he developed a mechanical running style that earned him the nickname "Robot" from his classmates at Roosevelt High School in Dallas. Throughout high school, Martin competed against Michael Johnson of Skyline High School, who later went on to set the world record at 200 and 400 meters and win four Olympic gold medals. In head-to-head high school competition, Johnson never beat Martin. "He was phenomenal," Johnson recalled of Martin, during an interview in 2008 with the Dallas Morning News. "It was incredible to watch, but at the same time I had to compete against him every week," Johnson said. "You knew first place was gone. You tried to beat out the other guys for second."[4] He was named Track and Field News "High School Athlete of the Year" in 1984 and 1985, the first male athlete to win the award twice.[7] As a college freshman, Martin helped Southern Methodist University win the 1986 NCAA track and field championship with a 43.5-second relay carry that propelled the Mustangs to a dramatic victory. His coach at SMU proclaimed Martin "the greatest pure sprinter I’ve ever seen…better than Bob Hayes."[1]
  • I'm a zygote and I can run a Marathon in a planck time.
  • Don’t you all here the hurricane behind these dudes? The wind is clearly not legal
  • My homie Jmee Samuels was the first high school athlete to run under 10.1(10.08) back in 2005. High school national record until years later when Jeff Demps ran 10.01. Wish he had video of him running back then, forever a high track legend!
  • @animeleek
    why the hell do they have Black Track fields ?? that shit makes it just hotter in the summer
  • @TorinYao
    Ha 3:38, after the announcer says 9.99 The guy in the background died
  • @grzlbr
    Japan race had no wind, therefore the fastest of all time
  • I don't know how it is now but when I was in high school so many people were taking something.
  • Man how times have changed. When I was in high school (1994), if you ran 10.5-10.6 you were considered fast! Dudes running 9.9 and 10.1 in high school now is crazy!