Wait.... he CHOSE a university without a track team? He isn't "left without a team." He just didn't make track a priority. Texas has several colleges that have both programs. As far as top track schools, those would be Arkansas, A&M, LSU, Florida and Oregon. All of those schools also have top tier football programs. Oregon isn't SEC, but still gets plenty of national attention.
You forgot USC and about to be a member of the Big 10 while SMU is still a member of the dying AAC that is about to lose U of Houston, Cincinnati and UCF to the Big 12 next year. Oregon is still part of the devastated PAC 12 that lost USC and UCLA.
I missed the part where he was "left without a track team." Sounds like he chose to attend a university without a men's track team, that has pledged to help him continue in track. This station really needs to have higher standards.
Samething I was thinking 🤔. He picked a school for football that does not have a track team. Track came around and he got more offers and decided to stick with his first pick. "The school with no track team"
He chose to attend SMU before his breakout T&F season. SMU can promise to help him all they want, but who will coach him, attend T&F meets with him, pay for travel, etc., not to mention no 4x100m relay team. He should transfer to University of Houston or Baylor after his freshman season because both offer better football teams and competitive T&F teams.
@Shane Plyler “UA-cam is new media and is pretty much unregulated bullshit, this is not that.” Literally the guy commenting under a UA-cam video on UA-cam 😂😂
@@kujichaguliaself-determina7388 All he needs at SMU is a good coach with a track and field background that'll be committed to helping him be prepared for track season every year. If he gets that, all he needs to do if focus on the 100m, 200m, and whatever field events he's good at. He doesn't need a relay team.
@@pierregoree145 you have a couple of rare gifts. Try not to squander them. Work hard in your education. Work hard in your sports. You have your whole life in front of you. Stay focused. Good things come to those that work the hardest. You've done very well so far. Good luck young man. I'm rooting for you as well as thousands of people around our country are also. 🙂
You did say young man which is what he is. I don't know what the hell is this boy's problem is, because he called him a boy. That's not right even if it is a black male saying it. It's disrespectful and don't believe it was just a misread . That's a man until it's proof he's not.
WRONG. That college doesn't give a sh*t about the kid if he gets hurt playing football for the next 4 years. He needs to switch schools immediately and get into a good track program.
'The kid' isn't trapped at that school, and could easily switch if he wanted to pursue exclusively track, and he isn't obligated to do so. There's nothing wrong with doing things your way. He made his choice to continue in both sports, and there's nothing wrong with that.
Much more money in football than track. The world championships just happened and virtually no one is talking about it. When I bring it up in competition I get blank stares, and people don't recognize the biggest stars like McLaughlin, Mu, Warholm, Lyles, Kerley. And it's much easier to be one out of 1600 NFL players making on average several million a year, or one out of 5-10 notable track athletes who make a couple million at most from sponsors.
@@TheGuyCalledX WRONG, WRONG, WRONG.... most pro football players don't end up making much as their careers are very short with an average of only 3 years because of injuries. You cannot look at a handful of top football players and point to them for their success because I can also then point out top sprinters like Usain Bolt with a net worth of $90 MILLION. And FYI, the average pro football salary is $860,000 per year, NOT "several million" so quit posting misinformation. Do a little more research and you'll see that most pro football players end up BROKE after they retire from the game. But let's put the money aside for just a minute....the lifetime of disability this kid will likely suffer from knee and shoulder injuries as well as traumatic BRAIN INJURY from football makes track a MUCH better choice just for that reason alone. Not to mention, the likelihood of this kid getting injured in college football before he even gets to the pros is VERY high. Do you have any other misinformation that you want to post?
Because it’s always been called BOYS track in HS everywhere. Why tf would it be called young man’s track. Quit trying to make shit racist when he’s LITERALLY A BOY.
@@davidramirez2162 - nobody said anything about racism until you did. I pointed out he's a man not a boy. Why are you so sensitive about your racist attitudes?
Why is this a story if the young man said he's sticking to his commitment to SMU? He's clearly talented, but he can easily go to another school if he wants track and football.
My friend ran track and played football for SMU. He was drafted and went to the NY jets and sent team to playoffs and AFC championship game. It is a shame SMU lost their track team. I wonder if NCAA rulings were the cause of it.
SMU could not figure out how to keep a successful program and blamed Title 9. SMU is still feeling the effects of the death penalty. Look how long it took to upgrade their facilities. No wonder they are in an inferior conference.
Bad advisers, they supposed to tell this young man to transfer to a school with both a track&field and football program. If not, he'll learn the hard way not to make decisions based on emotions without logic in the real world.
I assume that SMU is paying his young man that handsome penny for attending. if not this dude is wasting his talent he needs to go to the school are any number of schools in Texas but have both of track and football program
I think this was a good decision tbh. If he has a falling out or doesn’t respect how the track coach on the team that he’s on is coaching him, he can just switch teams unlike if he were running track at a university. Also, he won’t just be restricted to the coaches at the college he attends. He can travel anywhere he wants to train with the best coaches in the off-season instead of being restricted to the area that he goes to school in
@@Avogadros_number All that sounds fine and dandy, but colleges blow smoke sometimes to get what they want. But he'll find out the hard way how colleges don't give a crap about anyone's personal ventures if it's not making the school money. They're totally self-centered.
Someone failed this talented young man with this choice of college that he made, and the decision to continue playing football. At worst, he should attend college just on an academic scholarship and join a well known track team. He could get sponsorships, appearance fees and endorsements, without the chances of getting injured playing football and a lack of having a yearlong track teams support. This move is great for his academic future. But not so much for his track future. I hope that I’m wrong.
@@Big_Thony This kid is guaranteed an income in track and field right now, even with a decline in performance… Unless you know something that hasn’t been said, he on any NFL scouts radar. You’re talking like he’s a guaranteed NFL star player, which he’s not. But let’s play devil’s advocate.. at bottom level, the minimum nfl salary is $650,000 and not guaranteed. There are 18 & 19 year old track stars (which he would be right now) that are earning $1-$2 million guaranteed.
@@caipirinha_king1632 *Also he has to get through 4 years in football without a career ending injury. In the meantime, he will likely not progress much in track because SMU lack of a track program and anyone thinking he can train his self to world competitive levels in track, doesn't know anything about the sport at all*
@@__________Troll__________ Exactly… College football training is almost all year long after their season is over and winter break. He made a commitment. I just think it was to the wrong sport. The days of college players being two sport athletes and on Olympic teams has been long gone.
However, if he becomes an NFL corner, the top guys are making 20 million a year. In 3 to 5 years, the decent CBs will be making 20 mill per year. Choose football unless he is significantly better at track.
Pierre did run the fastest all conditions time in the country. So technically he is the fastest highschool track athlete in the US. He ran 10.09 with extremely illegal wind.
NOPE. Running *with* illegal wind doesn't "technically make him the fastest". The fastest performance is ALWAYS and ONLY wind legal. Wind-aided performances are completely meaningless. All true track heads know this. It's the just the rest of the world that cannot figure it out.
Please lookup what happened to Terrence Wheatley out of Plano East. 10.05(!) 100m and >50” triple jump. Played DB at Colorado instead of going pro in track. 5yrs later he was drafted in the 2nd round, but washed out of the NFL in a few years due to injury. Hope this kid avoids injuries. Devon Allen focused on track after the football injuries mounted bc he still had world class speed. Now he’s going back to football and still runs 4.3.
@@alphablobmom5521 - Eh, that's misleading. How many of the 20% are 100M sprinters and not other categories like Distance Runners? 100M runners are usually very high-profile and have long careers. They get an unbelievable amount of sponsorship, too.
SMU doesn’t have a track team, but the best kinematics lab? They’re going to turn this young man into something different since they’ll only have him to focus on.
@@hotdogman3603 it’s not hard to believe, however, it’s not because coaches know more. It’s because of coaching gamble and some of their guesses have worked. Most coaching though is 20 years behind the science.
@@Hengel_Andrews I wouldn’t call it gambling. I would call it testing a hypothesis or an experiment 🤔 where championships are on the line. High level coaches are most definitely ahead of science. Can’t speak for the coaches you’ve experienced
In Track and Field, you don't need to be on the college track team in order to be successful. You can train on your own and become fast enough to go pro. All u need are the fast times and a great coach.
I read the caption like WTF??? Realizing this is from a "news" outlet coming outta ignit-ass Texas where this reference is OK. I'm certain I'm not the only one who peeped it.
He can join a track club or just go to meets and run unattached. I just hope the young man stays healthy, stays out of trouble and surrounds himself with good, wise people. He'll be ok.
He doesn't need a team. Find a club or sign up for USA track and field and travel to open meets. He'll have to pay money but he can still run. And if he's that good he'll be ok.
Respectfully, a quality college team is way more than just going to meets. It's coaching, nutrition, strength and conditioning and an environment focused on improving that specific skill set.
Its wild to me that this high school age male can still be the times of all the world class professional female sprinters.... if this isnt proof on how males and females are physically different and the sports should be treated as such, then i dont know what is!!
This is the prime example I always use. 10.66 would win 99% of all female races ever ran. Marion Jones was running 10.7's juiced to the hilt. Shelly ann Frasier and Elaine Thompson are still juiced to the hilt and they would barely make top 5 at an Indiana boys high state finals meet. The 100m sprint is the absolute pinnacle of all athletics. It's the first thing anyone does athletically, too sprint against others. So it's the event that has the purest amount of talent. There are 8th grade boys who can run 10.7's... it's really so simple.
ALL this probably without doping yet. I think women in term of strength for the most part peak around a 14 to 16 years old teenager boy. If you had doping maybe a little bit higher . 17 and up for the most part Guys naturally have the advantage.
There is a sophomore in WV who ran a 10.45 into a -0.1 headwind. I think come his Senior, maybe even junior year, he will have the title of fastest highschooler in the Nation.
football doesnt equate to fast track times in college. At the University level track is track and football is football. you will have to choose one to be elite.
He's not good enough to be pro yet and even if he was he'd get smoked. Mens 100 is the most competitive event ,can't even compare that to the events Allison was running.
He needs to work on that drive phase though. All that speed and my guy popped straight up out of the blocks and still ran a 10.3!!!! I salute, but he needs some good coaching and he just might be great. I wish him the best and nothing less.
If he has legitimate track speed, he needs to choose track over football. Football is devastating to bodies and minds. There are several top tier track colleges in a 300 mile radius of DFW. He needs elite track coaches...
Nothing but a highlight peice. Sounds like he made his choice. He should have picked a school for track and field not football. That commitment stuff don't matter. Coaches, teams, schools don't honor it. Looks like the young man made his mind. Football will slow down/ stop his track career.
Please. Tsegaya Fazarro ran a legal 10.10. Rakim Deaver ran a legal 10.12. TMars McCallum ran a legal 10.13, Rodrick Pleasant ran a legal 10.14. The list goes on, buddy. 10.37 is a plebian time WAAAAAAAAAAY down on the list.
Fastest kid in the country !? Hell no!!! A junior from Cali named Rodrick Pleasant (state champion) ran a 10.14 legal wind …..and has another year left to run even faster
Pierre's fastest wind legal time was a 10.10 at districts in prelims. Thats faster than 10.14... Fastest time (but not wind legal) was a 10.08 for him. So yes, he is the fastest boy in the country this year
@@Bobbito3 There was no wind reading at district when he ran 10.10 so it’s not “legal”. Rodrick Pleasant ran the fastest legal time so he’s still the fastest.
I understand trying to stick by your word but what is that going to do for your future? I see so much regret in his future with this decision but I wish him the best of luck. There are too many great schools with both programs that would have offered him a full ride, it's not making sense.
I mean, that's not a national championship meet. Nike Outdoor Nationals was. That's like saying for the Olympics they should just give the medal to the best time on paper.
@@SPECIALTRADER1 Weak & white? Didn't a white Englishman win the 1500m gold? 🤣 Didn't a half white Italian win the gold medal in the sprint? These are not even sports that white folk are known for. White folk dominate more sports overal in the Olympics than black folk do.
Well I hope he can succeed in track without a team but if his heart is in football then he has to follow that passion. Unfortunately football left him getting injured a lot but wish the best for him!
He can definitely still just compete in the big track meets during the off season and he’s still gonna be in insane shape from football
Track shape slightly different though
@@charlietian4023 not really unless you’re talking Olympics.
Many athletes tan and played
But he said that he receives a lot of injuries from football
Wait.... he CHOSE a university without a track team?
He isn't "left without a team."
He just didn't make track a priority.
Texas has several colleges that have both programs.
As far as top track schools, those would be Arkansas, A&M, LSU, Florida and Oregon.
All of those schools also have top tier football programs.
Oregon isn't SEC, but still gets plenty of national attention.
You forgot USC and about to be a member of the Big 10 while SMU is still a member of the dying AAC that is about to lose U of Houston, Cincinnati and UCF to the Big 12 next year. Oregon is still part of the devastated PAC 12 that lost USC and UCLA.
I agree, can not forget USC and UCLA for track. The move to the Big 10 could be due to Basketball.
I missed the part where he was "left without a track team." Sounds like he chose to attend a university without a men's track team, that has pledged to help him continue in track. This station really needs to have higher standards.
Are you not familiar with UA-cam? Usually people clickbait to get views to help with their exposure. Marketing 101.
Samething I was thinking 🤔. He picked a school for football that does not have a track team. Track came around and he got more offers and decided to stick with his first pick. "The school with no track team"
He chose to attend SMU before his breakout T&F season. SMU can promise to help him all they want, but who will coach him, attend T&F meets with him, pay for travel, etc., not to mention no 4x100m relay team. He should transfer to University of Houston or Baylor after his freshman season because both offer better football teams and competitive T&F teams.
@Shane Plyler “UA-cam is new media and is pretty much unregulated bullshit, this is not that.” Literally the guy commenting under a UA-cam video on UA-cam 😂😂
@@kujichaguliaself-determina7388 All he needs at SMU is a good coach with a track and field background that'll be committed to helping him be prepared for track season every year. If he gets that, all he needs to do if focus on the 100m, 200m, and whatever field events he's good at. He doesn't need a relay team.
I truly admire this young man. He says what he does and does what he says. Best of luck to him in whatever he pursues.
Thank you
@@pierregoree145 you have a couple of rare gifts. Try not to squander them. Work hard in your education. Work hard in your sports. You have your whole life in front of you. Stay focused. Good things come to those that work the hardest. You've done very well so far. Good luck young man. I'm rooting for you as well as thousands of people around our country are also. 🙂
@@pierregoree145 W mans
You did say young man which is what he is. I don't know what the hell is this boy's problem is, because he called him a boy. That's not right even if it is a black male saying it. It's disrespectful and don't believe it was just a misread . That's a man until it's proof he's not.
Good luck with that in the day of NIL deals! Loyalty means nothing! Just ask all the schools who lost players to Lincoln Riley and USC.
WRONG. That college doesn't give a sh*t about the kid if he gets hurt playing football for the next 4 years. He needs to switch schools immediately and get into a good track program.
'The kid' isn't trapped at that school, and could easily switch if he wanted to pursue exclusively track, and he isn't obligated to do so. There's nothing wrong with doing things your way. He made his choice to continue in both sports, and there's nothing wrong with that.
I bet he transfers. SMU will less relevant in football and track on his own will not work.
Much more money in football than track. The world championships just happened and virtually no one is talking about it. When I bring it up in competition I get blank stares, and people don't recognize the biggest stars like McLaughlin, Mu, Warholm, Lyles, Kerley. And it's much easier to be one out of 1600 NFL players making on average several million a year, or one out of 5-10 notable track athletes who make a couple million at most from sponsors.
@@TheGuyCalledX
WRONG, WRONG, WRONG.... most pro football players don't end up making much as their careers are very short with an average of only 3 years because of injuries. You cannot look at a handful of top football players and point to them for their success because I can also then point out top sprinters like Usain Bolt with a net worth of $90 MILLION. And FYI, the average pro football salary is $860,000 per year, NOT "several million" so quit posting misinformation. Do a little more research and you'll see that most pro football players end up BROKE after they retire from the game.
But let's put the money aside for just a minute....the lifetime of disability this kid will likely suffer from knee and shoulder injuries as well as traumatic BRAIN INJURY from football makes track a MUCH better choice just for that reason alone. Not to mention, the likelihood of this kid getting injured in college football before he even gets to the pros is VERY high. Do you have any other misinformation that you want to post?
WTF do they keep calling him a "boy". He is a YOUNG MAN. Give respect where it's due.
Exactly!
Because it’s always been called BOYS track in HS everywhere. Why tf would it be called young man’s track. Quit trying to make shit racist when he’s LITERALLY A BOY.
@@davidramirez2162 - nobody said anything about racism until you did. I pointed out he's a man not a boy. Why are you so sensitive about your racist attitudes?
@@davidramirez2162 It's called the MENS Track & Field team. Constantly calling him boy is obnoxious and disrespectful
@@davidramirez2162 who said anything about race?😂 istg you trippin fr
I hope football doesn't injure him too badly. So much talent.
I wouldn't play if I'm him. Football will mess up his chances
@@tdb4763 football will make you more money though.
@@justus4423 True
@@justus4423 and more brain damage
@@ghost_1153 true
He needs to find a very good track club in the area. His coach can help with that and he can still train and compete in track.
Why is this a story if the young man said he's sticking to his commitment to SMU? He's clearly talented, but he can easily go to another school if he wants track and football.
Probably some money they offered him
My friend ran track and played football for SMU. He was drafted and went to the NY jets and sent team to playoffs and AFC championship game. It is a shame SMU lost their track team. I wonder if NCAA rulings were the cause of it.
Good old title 9
Edit: I am completely wrong.
Who was he
@@matthewhyman2208 Russell Carter
SMU could not figure out how to keep a successful program and blamed Title 9. SMU is still feeling the effects of the death penalty. Look how long it took to upgrade their facilities. No wonder they are in an inferior conference.
@@theraplawyer that’s fair!
I forgot about that
Bad advisers, they supposed to tell this young man to transfer to a school with both a track&field and football program. If not, he'll learn the hard way not to make decisions based on emotions without logic in the real world.
OMG, yes! He doesn’t owe that school anything. He needs to make the best decision for himself.
I assume that SMU is paying his young man that handsome penny for attending. if not this dude is wasting his talent he needs to go to the school are any number of schools in Texas but have both of track and football program
I think this was a good decision tbh. If he has a falling out or doesn’t respect how the track coach on the team that he’s on is coaching him, he can just switch teams unlike if he were running track at a university. Also, he won’t just be restricted to the coaches at the college he attends. He can travel anywhere he wants to train with the best coaches in the off-season instead of being restricted to the area that he goes to school in
@@Avogadros_number All that sounds fine and dandy, but colleges blow smoke sometimes to get what they want. But he'll find out the hard way how colleges don't give a crap about anyone's personal ventures if it's not making the school money. They're totally self-centered.
@@jamesross1798 agreed
“He had always been injured in football.” You know who also was injured before switching sports? Lamont Marcell Jacobs.
I think he said interested… But maybe that’s just me
Someone failed this talented young man with this choice of college that he made, and the decision to continue playing football. At worst, he should attend college just on an academic scholarship and join a well known track team. He could get sponsorships, appearance fees and endorsements, without the chances of getting injured playing football and a lack of having a yearlong track teams support. This move is great for his academic future. But not so much for his track future. I hope that I’m wrong.
@@Big_Thony l
@@Big_Thony
This kid is guaranteed an income in track and field right now, even with a decline in performance… Unless you know something that hasn’t been said, he on any NFL scouts radar. You’re talking like he’s a guaranteed NFL star player, which he’s not. But let’s play devil’s advocate.. at bottom level, the minimum nfl salary is $650,000 and not guaranteed. There are 18 & 19 year old track stars (which he would be right now) that are earning $1-$2 million guaranteed.
@@Big_Thony *You're joking right? Or are you just basing it on money?*
@@caipirinha_king1632 *Also he has to get through 4 years in football without a career ending injury. In the meantime, he will likely not progress much in track because SMU lack of a track program and anyone thinking he can train his self to world competitive levels in track, doesn't know anything about the sport at all*
@@__________Troll__________
Exactly… College football training is almost all year long after their season is over and winter break. He made a commitment. I just think it was to the wrong sport. The days of college players being two sport athletes and on Olympic teams has been long gone.
Judging by the way he caught that ball I assume he will ONLY play defense lmao!!
i saw him run with my own eyes, and dude deserves the notoriety!!
He has running speed that can take care of him for life. Ditch football before it takes your body away.
one of my friends ruined his knee playing football and said he should've just kept going with what what not only he was good at but safer.
Hopefully he won’t have to learn the hard way.
However, if he becomes an NFL corner, the top guys are making 20 million a year. In 3 to 5 years, the decent CBs will be making 20 mill per year. Choose football unless he is significantly better at track.
Amen
I was at the Nike nationals in Eugene last month and saw this kid run. He’s huge and can move!
If he lost weight he could be a beast. Football going to take his track career.
People don’t understand how big he is in person. A true multi sport athlete.
1:15 that footwork and catching looks suspect 😂😂
ong😂😂
ong 😂😂😂
apparently the recruiters at smu doesn't see it your way
Chill bro in sneakers so I’ll excuse the footwork 😂
The university is going to go to back him as long as he’s able to play football, the moment he gets hurt everything is done, that is the reality
Pierre did run the fastest all conditions time in the country. So technically he is the fastest highschool track athlete in the US. He ran 10.09 with extremely illegal wind.
Would be best bolts WR
He's definitely hitting a 9 second time with the wind on his back right?
That don't make you the fastest
@@SauceKingg He ran 10.22 into -0.5 with would equal a 10.18
NOPE.
Running *with* illegal wind doesn't "technically make him the fastest". The fastest performance is ALWAYS and ONLY wind legal. Wind-aided performances are completely meaningless. All true track heads know this. It's the just the rest of the world that cannot figure it out.
His 10.09 at +6.7/ms tailwind converts to 10.34 at the altitude he was running at. So basically the same as his existing legal PR.
Gender Equity? Really? That's the reason they dropped men's track?
Blame the NCAA for grandfathering in football, knowing it'd put all other men's sports at risk
SMU athletics are struggling for money. Really?
Please lookup what happened to Terrence Wheatley out of Plano East. 10.05(!) 100m and >50” triple jump. Played DB at Colorado instead of going pro in track. 5yrs later he was drafted in the 2nd round, but washed out of the NFL in a few years due to injury. Hope this kid avoids injuries.
Devon Allen focused on track after the football injuries mounted bc he still had world class speed. Now he’s going back to football and still runs 4.3.
There's just no money in track, is there?
@@alphablobmom5521 I’m track itself? Not really. A lot in the sponsorships that come with it however
@@A_Easley Apparently only 20% of pro runners make more than 50k. It seems that even a fringe NFL player has a chance at more.
@@alphablobmom5521 - Eh, that's misleading. How many of the 20% are 100M sprinters and not other categories like Distance Runners? 100M runners are usually very high-profile and have long careers. They get an unbelievable amount of sponsorship, too.
@@alphablobmom5521 Well if you are elite there is money for you
SMU doesn’t have a track team, but the best kinematics lab? They’re going to turn this young man into something different since they’ll only have him to focus on.
probably not... sports science is like 10 years behind coaching knowledge. Hard to believe but true.
@@hotdogman3603 it’s not hard to believe, however, it’s not because coaches know more. It’s because of coaching gamble and some of their guesses have worked. Most coaching though is 20 years behind the science.
@@hotdogman3603 it’s not coaching knowledge it’s coaching assuming, gambling and experimentation. Knowledge needs repeatability and confirmation
@@Hengel_Andrews I wouldn’t call it gambling. I would call it testing a hypothesis or an experiment 🤔 where championships are on the line. High level coaches are most definitely ahead of science. Can’t speak for the coaches you’ve experienced
@@Hengel_Andrews the best coaches coached for years. Plenty of repetition
Ummm. Ever heard of Erriyon Knighton? 18 years old; 2022 best: 10.04.
Ummm... he's already signed a Pro Contract. Lol
He has a team
18? That's not a kid..
@@CoachJohnMcGuirk they’re the same age
@@janos9969 he’s technically a boy because he’s breaking world junior records
“Most people can’t finish things under 10 seconds” I think my girlfriend would say otherwise. Beat that buddy
she wont be your gf after she finds someone that plays the long game
Was he in the Mater Dei game?
He needs to choose another damn school. Why would he pick a school without a track team?
In Track and Field, you don't need to be on the college track team in order to be successful. You can train on your own and become fast enough to go pro. All u need are the fast times and a great coach.
What is bro thinking he could be going to the olympics for the 100 in a few years
Football would bring in more money
Wow they had to drop their track program just to even out male athletes to female athletes at the school. That is pathetic by the NCAA.
Doesn’t that defeat the purpose ? They’re trying to equal out something at the cost of sabotaging one side.
I just think about the injuries one can sustain with football
Yeah but you make so so so much more money in football
Hope he does well
Obviously wont with his decision-making skills.
I read the caption like WTF??? Realizing this is from a "news" outlet coming outta ignit-ass Texas where this reference is OK. I'm certain I'm not the only one who peeped it.
He can join a track club or just go to meets and run unattached. I just hope the young man stays healthy, stays out of trouble and surrounds himself with good, wise people. He'll be ok.
You seriously just called that young man boy?
SMU seriously doesn't have a track team!?
They cut it for woke points in gender equity.
@@Dead_Goat That is pretty messed up. Texas is a hot bed for track and field. Unfortunate for all the kids who could've went there on scholarship.....
Jordan Anthony is the fast high schooler in the country
well in the 200. in the 100 he ran a 10.14 didn’t he? whereas this kid ran a 10.09.
He doesn't need a team. Find a club or sign up for USA track and field and travel to open meets. He'll have to pay money but he can still run. And if he's that good he'll be ok.
Respectfully, a quality college team is way more than just going to meets.
It's coaching, nutrition, strength and conditioning and an environment focused on improving that specific skill set.
How can a school help you continue in t track if they have no track team?🤷🏾♂️
He doesn’t owe that school anything! Pick what is right for you. Situation do change, put yourself first.
They should have said kid or teen instead of the word "boy"
Salute young homie!!💯
So he made a choice? And what are we supposed to do with this information?
"I hate seeing people in front of me." 🤣🤣🤣 What an awesome quote from a sprinter.
Its wild to me that this high school age male can still be the times of all the world class professional female sprinters.... if this isnt proof on how males and females are physically different and the sports should be treated as such, then i dont know what is!!
This is the prime example I always use. 10.66 would win 99% of all female races ever ran. Marion Jones was running 10.7's juiced to the hilt. Shelly ann Frasier and Elaine Thompson are still juiced to the hilt and they would barely make top 5 at an Indiana boys high state finals meet. The 100m sprint is the absolute pinnacle of all athletics. It's the first thing anyone does athletically, too sprint against others. So it's the event that has the purest amount of talent. There are 8th grade boys who can run 10.7's... it's really so simple.
I agree with you. And anyone with a sound mind would to. But Watch out. The feminist are going to be angry lmao
ALL this probably without doping yet. I think women in term of strength for the most part peak around a 14 to 16 years old teenager boy. If you had doping maybe a little bit higher . 17 and up for the most part Guys naturally have the advantage.
@@chuckdeuces911 you have evidence about Frauser and Thompson???
Um 18yo Male running these times
If anything
Shows male and female are
Not very different.
There is a sophomore in WV who ran a 10.45 into a -0.1 headwind. I think come his Senior, maybe even junior year, he will have the title of fastest highschooler in the Nation.
he competes on my aau team
@@urweird4629 Jerrae?
What’s the story here? Guy who runs 10.36 chooses to play football & run track in college? I hear about this all the time..
I love that he wants to stay with a hometown college. Wishing the best for him, make us proud!
I thought it said fattest at first
So he is knowingly going to a university without a mens track program to play football. How is this news?
How does a college not have a track team???
Man, I was the last recruiting Track and Field Class For SMU Mens Team. This year's SMU Football Teams looks Amazing! #PonyUp 🔥🔥🔥
You got to love women's equity.. way to destroy a good thing for a not so good thing.
How exactly do they reason that scrapping track and field closes the gender gap?
football doesnt equate to fast track times in college. At the University level track is track and football is football. you will have to choose one to be elite.
He is a big guy to run a 10.3. Most track stars only weigh about 160.
Usain Bolt weighed 220
@@steffdagreat7 But he is 6'5 though.
With the right coaching/management, it could work out for him. No team commitment to hinder training?
He should go pro like Allison Felix did while attending college.
He's not good enough to be pro yet and even if he was he'd get smoked. Mens 100 is the most competitive event ,can't even compare that to the events Allison was running.
He's not ready maam. Felix was making qualifiers at that age and had prior experience with the big boys. Pierre isn't ready yet for that yet.
He need to be running at least consistent 10.1 or 10.2 at this point to jump to pro level. A 10.36 is great, but it’s just OK at the pro level
For what NIL now
Outstanding character and talent
What's with the boy term? They Couldn't say freshmen, graduate, or his name? anything else?
Boy?!!!
He needs to work on that drive phase though. All that speed and my guy popped straight up out of the blocks and still ran a 10.3!!!! I salute, but he needs some good coaching and he just might be great. I wish him the best and nothing less.
Lol y’all knighton went pro he doesn’t count anymore
Na 10.08 6.7 tailwind don’t count Jordan Anthony ran 10.14 wind legal and ran 2 10.2s into slight headwinds and 20.35
10.36
My buddy dentarius Locke ran a 10.34 in Florida state finals in high school
Those are some great times
If he has legitimate track speed, he needs to choose track over football. Football is devastating to bodies and minds. There are several top tier track colleges in a 300 mile radius of DFW. He needs elite track coaches...
Yeah, but if plays football with that elite speed. He can get an NFL look.
Looks like he should've played football. Dude has quite a frame
Should drop SMU. I’m confused lol he’s not going to excel in track if he’s not apart of a program.
Nothing but a highlight peice. Sounds like he made his choice. He should have picked a school for track and field not football. That commitment stuff don't matter. Coaches, teams, schools don't honor it. Looks like the young man made his mind. Football will slow down/ stop his track career.
Where is this “boy” y’all talking about?
Bespoke service, beautiful story.
Mikey Mclain from IOWA ran 10.37 this year as well....... acting like this dude is in a league of his own.
Facts
California also had a freshman run 10.35 he went on to Nationals too
@@kelvinconner7878 holy shit
This dude has run significantly faster in his high school years. 10.3 wasn’t his personal best.
Please.
Tsegaya Fazarro ran a legal 10.10. Rakim Deaver ran a legal 10.12. TMars McCallum ran a legal 10.13, Rodrick Pleasant ran a legal 10.14.
The list goes on, buddy. 10.37 is a plebian time WAAAAAAAAAAY down on the list.
Fastest kid in the country !? Hell no!!! A junior from Cali named Rodrick Pleasant (state champion) ran a 10.14 legal wind …..and has another year left to run even faster
Pierre's fastest wind legal time was a 10.10 at districts in prelims. Thats faster than 10.14...
Fastest time (but not wind legal) was a 10.08 for him.
So yes, he is the fastest boy in the country this year
@@Bobbito3 There was no wind reading at district when he ran 10.10 so it’s not “legal”. Rodrick Pleasant ran the fastest legal time so he’s still the fastest.
@@Bobbito3 incorrect because Rodrick also ran a 20.4 wind legal ….going into his senior year Pierre is already gone
Erriyon knighton
Jordan anthony ran 10.14 windlegal and t'mars McCallum ran 10.13 with virtually no wind at all
He can still transfer
"FASTEST BOY IN THE COUNTRY CHOOSES FOOTBALL OVER TRACK."
Fixed the Title of the video for you.
So he never considered going to a school with a track team and nobody mentioned it to him?
I understand trying to stick by your word but what is that going to do for your future? I see so much regret in his future with this decision but I wish him the best of luck. There are too many great schools with both programs that would have offered him a full ride, it's not making sense.
News flash he doesn’t need to run track in college he can run at events independently. They could of did a better title for this new piece
I hope Gatorade is smart enough to build some thing around him
Boy?
Erryon Knighton already has a team.
Have this boy play running back
Bro said he hates seeing people in front of him!
He isn’t the fastest in the country tho. That goes to Pleasant who ran a 10.14 this year, wind legal at masters for the California state championships
I mean, that's not a national championship meet. Nike Outdoor Nationals was. That's like saying for the Olympics they should just give the medal to the best time on paper.
you can always switch colleges - sheez
How does eliminating track close the gap in gender equity?
BOY... that's a strong young MAN...💪🏿
He's probably doping.
@@Scottie-Jonno When you're weak and white then of course you would think he's doping.🥸
@@SPECIALTRADER1 Weak & white? Didn't a white Englishman win the 1500m gold? 🤣 Didn't a half white Italian win the gold medal in the sprint? These are not even sports that white folk are known for. White folk dominate more sports overal in the Olympics than black folk do.
This young man needs better advisors.
Fastest boy? He isn’t Erriyon?
I just hope he gets a good private coach or something.
Erriyon Knighton anyone? Pretty sure he is the fastest boy in the nation.
He is pro this is in highschool
Tell’em hit me up. I’m in Dallas and I got time
I thought it said fatest
thought his teammates died in a plane crash or something
pray for no injuries from football!!!!
Maximize his talents - doing whatever it takes.
That school better build a track
Race this dude back in high school, straight beast
This kid could be a valuable player for tha packers.
Hopefully he can get some NIL money to hire a private coach on his own time. Texas has no shortage of private training facilities and speed coaches
Another Devon Allen coming? so exciting
Well I hope he can succeed in track without a team but if his heart is in football then he has to follow that passion. Unfortunately football left him getting injured a lot but wish the best for him!
Might be a stupid question but why do they keep calling him a boy?