We are in living in the era of teenage super talents. On Saturday, Mirra Andreeva won the French Open at 19. Spain’s Lamine Yamal, at 18, is one of the favourites for the World Cup’s golden ball. Then there is Cooper Lutkenhaus, the 17-year-old American already making the world’s best athletes gasp for air and reach for superlatives, who may yet prove the best of the bunch.
True, it is early days. But Lutkenhaus is already track and field’s youngest world champion, having won 800m indoor gold in March. On Sunday, he added to his CV with victory against a top-class field in his first Diamond League race. But it was what his rivals said afterwards in Stockholm that left the deepest mark.
The 2023 800m world champion, Marco Arop, called him a “special talent” while Britain’s Jake Wightman, a former 1500m world champion, waxed lyrical about his speed and maturity before adding: “He’s going to keep getting better and better.”
Lutkenhaus is used to such praise. When he set a personal best of 1min 42.27sec at the US trials last year, one leading coach, Steve Magness, described it as “the most impressive athletic feat in history”.
Just about the only person not shouting from the rooftops is Lutkenhaus himself, but it is clear he has high ambitions. “You want to win as many titles as you can and have the records,” he says. “But I also want people to look at me as someone that helped change the sport and someone they were excited to watch.” Big words, but Lutkenhaus believes he can back them up.
Athletics is at an interesting point, given it seems to have teen phenoms coming out of its ears. The Australian sprinter Gout Gout, 18, is the fastest man over 200m this year. Another Australian, Cam Myers, at the same age, ran one of the top 20 outdoor mile times in 2025. The New Zealander Sam Ruthe, at 16, ran 3min 48.88sec for the mile.
So what explains it? In Lutkenhaus’s case, genetics undoubtedly play a part, given his parents were top college runners. But he also stresses that his relatively blue-collar upbringing has been a major factor. “I’m not from Beverly Hills, that’s for sure,” he says. “I come from a place where everyone likes to work hard and a family that likes to work hard. That makes it really easy to love what I do. It’s second nature to me.”
His alarm is set to 6am so he can do his workouts before school and the heat of the Texan summer kicks in. Does he ever press the snooze button? “Only on weekends.” The only thing he dreads, he says, are long runs over 30 minutes.
While many children increasingly focus on one sport, Lutkenhaus played multiple games in middle school, between 11 and 14, including wrestling, American football, basketball and track and field. “I think you should play all sports,” he says. “You need to be able to try everything because you absorb learning experiences from every sport. Team sports. Individual sports. You can learn from all of them.” Lutkenhaus says it was only when he ran 1:49 in his freshman year, at 15, closing the last 200m in a rapid 24.6sec, that he realised a pro career in track and field could be on.
One of Lutkenhaus’s managers, Brad Yewer, who has worked in sport for more two decades cites a broader factor in the rise in teenage talent in track and field: better coaching. Many old-school coaches would tell athletes to simply run more to get faster, and frown upon cross-training or lifting weights. Nowadays, anyone can see how Jakob Ingebrigtsen and others train and learn from it.Like many people his age, Lutkenhaus is often on YouTube. The difference is, he is watching old races. One of his favourites is David Rudisha’s front-running demolition at the London 2012 Olympics, when he broke the world record and took gold. “A lot of people don’t like to push on that third 200m because you’re thinking: ‘Oh, you have one lap left, it’s going to be uncomfortable’,” Lutkenhaus says. “But that was Rudisha’s best part of the race. I’ve tried to mirror how he does it. Once you hit the bell lap, it’s time to go. Because that’s where you make or break a race.”
But isn’t that the point where the lungs are burning? He nods. “The most important thing is to cancel out that little voice in the back of your head. I believe 800 is the hardest event. Because of the pain, but also there’s so many different ways you can race it. There’s so many small decisions that can win your race or lose it by 0.01sec.”
People are talking Lutkenhaus up as a poster child of the 2028 Olympics. “People always ask me, are you focused on LA?” he says. “But I’m just focused on tomorrow.”
On Wednesday, he will be in Oslo to face the Olympic and world 800m champion, Emmanuel Wanyonyi, for the first time. It is a test he is relishing. Before coming to Europe, he ran a series of 200m intervals, starting at 26sec and closing at 23.2 for the last one. “I love to hit speed,” he says. “And I love the feeling of having the spikes on. I was a little tired, and it was hot outside, especially in Texas in the summer, but to close like that, I know I’m in good shape.”
Lutkenhaus also has a hinterland. He intends to go to college, to major in kinesiology and minor in sports marketing. He also likes history and before he won the world indoor title, spent the day of the final walking around Toruń in Poland, marvelling at the medieval city walls and old church. “I was not that nervous,” he says. “I was more excited than anything.”
Which historical character does he most identify with? “Napoleon,” he says. “Because he was a super aggressive person, especially whenever he went into battle. I always like to be aggressive when I race.”As the world of track and field is rapidly finding out.
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