Gout Gout stuns again to win 200m Australian title after rival Lachie Kennedy disqualified | Athletics

Gout Gout has recorded a stunning 19.84s in the final of the 200m at the national championships in Perth, but an illegal tailwind of 2.2m/s has again prevented him from officially breaking the 20-second barrier.

The 17-year-old overcame nerves and two false starts, one which disqualified rival Lachie Kennedy, to soar down the straight and stop the clock a massive 14 hundredths of a second under his previous best.

But while celebrating in front of thousands at the WA Athletics Stadium, the wind reading – just 0.2m/s above the legal limit – flashed up.

“It’s definitely frustrating,” he said. “I run fast times but the wind is not on my side, but I guess it’s just getting those nice runs, and then hopefully one day the wind will be great.”

HOW ABOUT GOUT 👑👑

The kid has done it again. 17-year-old Gout Gout has secured a slice of history becoming the second fastest Under 20 man in history over 200m in all conditions, gliding to a time of 19.84 (+2.2) to win the Australian 200m title!

We are running out of words… pic.twitter.com/LWmlunAidq

— Australian Athletics (@AustralianAths) April 13, 2025

Gout has now run below 20s twice in the 200m, and under 10s in the 100m twice more, but on every occasion the wind reading has been above what is allowed. But the lack of an official record was a minor blemish on another extraordinary afternoon in the history of Australian sport.

Thousands had filled the Perth track, and there were gasps when Kennedy broke early and was disqualified. It spoiled what had been pitched as a showdown between the pair of young Queenslanders after Kennedy upstaged the teenager in Melbourne two weeks ago.

Lachie Kennedy congratulates Gout Gout on winning the Australian 200m title in Perth.
Photograph: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

“It was very disappointing,” Gout said. “Our plan was to send it down the bend, and hopefully we can hold on for both sub-20 [seconds] but stuff like that happens and unfortunately he false started. It is what it is.”

Kennedy walked up the straight at the end of the race as Gout was being interviewed and the pair embraced near the finish line, as photographers circled and thousands cheered.

Gout Gout earlier cruised home in 20.21 in the 200m heat at the Australian Athletics titles. Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP

Gout revealed afterwards he had been “pretty nervous” during his week in Perth, but this victory provided relief. “It definitely feels great, and I was very ecstatic. Another sub-20 and a national championship at [age] 17.”

Earlier, in front of a full grandstand in temperatures above 30C, the teenager led the first heat comfortably before easing off with 50m to go. Despite his apathy, he still set a rapid time of 20.21s.

20-year-old Jessica Milat shocked her rivals in the women’s 200m with a personal best of 22.75 to become the latest young sprinting star to emerge in the Perth meet. Her race, immediately preceding Gout’s, had a wind reading of 1.2m/s.

Officials forced fans to queue for seats, after the 2,000-seat grandstand was filled approximately half an hour before the 200m heats. Hundreds more spectators were dotted around the arena’s grassy hill.

Jessica Milat of Victoria caused a boilover by winning the women’s 200m title in 22.75. Photograph: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

Peter Bol proved he is back to his best after a challenging period by breaking the Australian record in the 800m with a time of 1:43.79, beating the previous mark held by Joseph Deng by two tenths of a second.

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“We’re happy, we’re running, we’re running for Australia, running for family, running for everything at the moment, so much more purpose,” he said, adding that he wants to move forward after recent “interruptions”.

Bol was provisionally suspended in 2023 after returning an adverse analytical finding for synthetic EPO, a performance enhancing drug, but the ban was lifted shortly after his B sample returned an atypical finding.

“I’d never take anything back, and it’s a growth period that I learn from, but I’d never want it back at the same time, so just happy to be here,” he said.

On Sunday the 31-year-old put that chapter behind him, celebrating in front of his home fans as he crossed the line. He joked afterwards he had to steal back some of the limelight from the sprinters.

“I thought that if these guys can run nine and ten [seconds] flat in the heats and the semis, I’d better come out here and do something otherwise you’ll be forgotten,” he said.

Peyton Craig finished second, recording a personal best and a world championship qualifier of 1:44.07.

In the women’s 800m, Abbey Caldwell upstaged highly-fancied teenager Claudia Hollingsworth by pulling away in the final straight and finishing with a time of 2:00.51.

“I just wanted to back in my confidence in that last 100, and I’m glad I did, because I think that’s what got me over the line first,” she said.

Jess Hull backed up from the 1500m to win the 5000m and Nicola Olyslagers cleared 2.01m to win the women’s high jump over Eleanor Patterson.

Liam Adcock’s 8.14m was good enough to win the long jump, and 23-year-old Seth O’Donnell shocked Cam Myers and Ky Robinson to win the 5000m for his first national title.

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