Connect with us

Sports

Meet Quincy Wilson, the 16-year-old making his Olympic debut for Team USA track

Published

on

Meet Quincy Wilson, the 16-year-old making his Olympic debut for Team USA track

Quincy Wilson wins a men’s 400-meter heat during the U.S. track and field Olympic trials June 21 in Eugene, Ore. Wilson is set to run 4×400 preliminaries for the U.S. on Friday. (Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press)

It was about a month ago that Quincy Wilson qualified for the 2024 Summer Games, the skinny teenager holding his own against grown men in 400 meters at the U.S. Olympic track trials.

“I’m just running for my life,” he said. “At 16 years old, I’m like ecstatic right now.”

On Friday, it appears he will become an Olympian, with the official Games website listing him as one of four runners on the American squad for a preliminary round of the 4×400-meter relay.

Read more: Noah Lyles comes up short in Olympic men’s 200 meters while battling COVID

Wilson himself posted on social media: “Tune in Friday morning @ 5:05 a.m. est.”

The U.S. has the option to replace Wilson in the finals with a more experienced sprinter, a common practice that allows the veterans to keep fresh legs for other races. Wilson will, however, still receive a medal even if he’s replaced for the final if the team reaches the podium.

Though not the youngest member of the American team — the honor goes to gymnast Hezly Rivera — Wilson is close.

As a member of the Class of 2026 at the Bullis School in Maryland — a prep school for the U.S. Naval Academy, where his father played football — he ran under 45 seconds three times at the trials, breaking a 42-year-old record for his age group. His sixth-place finish in those finals put him in position to be named to the Olympic team.

Read more: Gymnast Hezly Rivera is Team USA’s youngest athlete at the 2024 Olympics

Now, when he goes home, maybe he can accomplish another milestone: Learning how to drive.

“I can’t take the classes because you have to take three weeks,” he said earlier this summer. “So I don’t know when I’m going to get my driver’s license.”

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Continue Reading