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Deadspin | Report: Ravens’ Nnamdi Madubuike could return in ’26  Dec 15, 2024; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike (92) is flagged for roughing the passer on New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito (15) during the first half at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images   The Baltimore Ravens are optimistic that standout defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike could return this season from what was considered a career-threatening neck injury he suffered in Week 2 of the 2025 season, ESPN reported Tuesday.  Per the report, Madubuike underwent neck surgery last week, with doctors telling the team that they thought he could return in 2026.  Without him manning the defensive line last season, the Ravens defense was 24th in the NFL and had trouble pressuring opposing quarterbacks. The Ravens had just 30 sacks for 189 yards in 2025, a huge drop from 2023 (60 sacks, 454 yards) and 2024 (54, 318).  Both the Ravens and Madubuike have been mum about his future since the injury, but it was known that the two-time Pro Bowl selection was taking part in Baltimore’s offseason workouts.  A third-round draft pick by Baltimore out of Texas A&M, Madubuike has 30 career sacks and 69 QB hits in 78 games (66 starts).   He also has 203 career tackles and two forced fumbles.  “Not having Nnamdi this year was a horrible situation for our team,” Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta said after the Ravens finished their season 8-9 and did not make the playoffs.   “I think it affected us in different ways — in many ways. He is a great player, a great person, a special person.”  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Report #Ravens #Nnamdi #Madubuike #return

Deadspin | Report: Ravens’ Nnamdi Madubuike could return in ’26
Deadspin | Report: Ravens’ Nnamdi Madubuike could return in ’26  Dec 15, 2024; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike (92) is flagged for roughing the passer on New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito (15) during the first half at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images   The Baltimore Ravens are optimistic that standout defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike could return this season from what was considered a career-threatening neck injury he suffered in Week 2 of the 2025 season, ESPN reported Tuesday.  Per the report, Madubuike underwent neck surgery last week, with doctors telling the team that they thought he could return in 2026.  Without him manning the defensive line last season, the Ravens defense was 24th in the NFL and had trouble pressuring opposing quarterbacks. The Ravens had just 30 sacks for 189 yards in 2025, a huge drop from 2023 (60 sacks, 454 yards) and 2024 (54, 318).  Both the Ravens and Madubuike have been mum about his future since the injury, but it was known that the two-time Pro Bowl selection was taking part in Baltimore’s offseason workouts.  A third-round draft pick by Baltimore out of Texas A&M, Madubuike has 30 career sacks and 69 QB hits in 78 games (66 starts).   He also has 203 career tackles and two forced fumbles.  “Not having Nnamdi this year was a horrible situation for our team,” Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta said after the Ravens finished their season 8-9 and did not make the playoffs.   “I think it affected us in different ways — in many ways. He is a great player, a great person, a special person.”  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Report #Ravens #Nnamdi #Madubuike #returnDec 15, 2024; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike (92) is flagged for roughing the passer on New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito (15) during the first half at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images

The Baltimore Ravens are optimistic that standout defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike could return this season from what was considered a career-threatening neck injury he suffered in Week 2 of the 2025 season, ESPN reported Tuesday.

Per the report, Madubuike underwent neck surgery last week, with doctors telling the team that they thought he could return in 2026.

Without him manning the defensive line last season, the Ravens defense was 24th in the NFL and had trouble pressuring opposing quarterbacks. The Ravens had just 30 sacks for 189 yards in 2025, a huge drop from 2023 (60 sacks, 454 yards) and 2024 (54, 318).

Both the Ravens and Madubuike have been mum about his future since the injury, but it was known that the two-time Pro Bowl selection was taking part in Baltimore’s offseason workouts.


A third-round draft pick by Baltimore out of Texas A&M, Madubuike has 30 career sacks and 69 QB hits in 78 games (66 starts).

He also has 203 career tackles and two forced fumbles.

“Not having Nnamdi this year was a horrible situation for our team,” Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta said after the Ravens finished their season 8-9 and did not make the playoffs.

“I think it affected us in different ways — in many ways. He is a great player, a great person, a special person.”

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Report #Ravens #Nnamdi #Madubuike #return

Dec 15, 2024; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Baltimore Ravens defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike (92) is flagged for roughing the passer on New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito (15) during the first half at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images

The Baltimore Ravens are optimistic that standout defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike could return this season from what was considered a career-threatening neck injury he suffered in Week 2 of the 2025 season, ESPN reported Tuesday.

Per the report, Madubuike underwent neck surgery last week, with doctors telling the team that they thought he could return in 2026.

Without him manning the defensive line last season, the Ravens defense was 24th in the NFL and had trouble pressuring opposing quarterbacks. The Ravens had just 30 sacks for 189 yards in 2025, a huge drop from 2023 (60 sacks, 454 yards) and 2024 (54, 318).

Both the Ravens and Madubuike have been mum about his future since the injury, but it was known that the two-time Pro Bowl selection was taking part in Baltimore’s offseason workouts.

A third-round draft pick by Baltimore out of Texas A&M, Madubuike has 30 career sacks and 69 QB hits in 78 games (66 starts).

He also has 203 career tackles and two forced fumbles.

“Not having Nnamdi this year was a horrible situation for our team,” Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta said after the Ravens finished their season 8-9 and did not make the playoffs.

“I think it affected us in different ways — in many ways. He is a great player, a great person, a special person.”

–Field Level Media

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#Deadspin #Report #Ravens #Nnamdi #Madubuike #return

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ISL 2025-26: Mohammedan SC holds sluggish Chennaiyin FC to goalless draw <div id="content-body-70889946" itemprop="articleBody"><p>Chennaiyin FC’s wait for back-to-back victories in the Indian Super League (ISL) 2025-26 season, and for its first win over bottom-placed Mohammedan FC, continued after it played out a goalless draw at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium on Tuesday.</p><p>The conditions were demanding, but Chennaiyin’s evening was marked more by a lack of urgency than by the weather, as Mohammedan grew in belief and came away with a deserved point.</p><p>It was the visitor who asked most of the early questions in a game short on clear openings. Hira Mondal came closest to breaking the deadlock. After Makan Chothe cut the ball onto his left foot and delivered an inviting cross, Hira arrived at the back post and guided his effort goalwards, only for Mohammad Nawaz to get his fingertips to it and keep Chennaiyin level. Soon after, Mahitosh Roy’s cross from the left picked out Hira again, but this time he could not keep his header down.</p><p>While Chothe remained a lively outlet in attack, Mohammedan’s defence was equally committed. Juwel Mazumder produced a crucial goal-line clearance towards the end of the first half after Mandar Dessai, on for the injured Klusner Pereira, sent in a cross from the left that found Imran Khan, whose effort looked destined to test the goalkeeper.</p><p><b>ALSO READ | <a href="https://sportstar.thehindu.com/football/indian-football/owen-coyle-interview-on-indian-football-oci-ryan-williams-jamshedpur-fc-isl/article70885515.ece" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Owen Coyle: India should make use of more talents from overseas like Ryan Williams</a></b></p><p>Imran was Chennaiyin’s most industrious player, covering ground and trying to inject urgency into an attack that too often lacked conviction. Klusner’s debut, however, ended prematurely after he picked up a knock.</p><p>Mohammedan goalkeeper Padam Chettri looked uneasy in the opening exchanges, failing to gather the ball cleanly on more than one occasion. Chennaiyin did show brief promise in patches, with Imran linking up neatly with Chima before Maheson Singh was found in a dangerous area, but the latter’s heavy first touch took the ball away from him, and the move ended only in a corner.</p><p>The second half brought more frustration than fluency for the home side. There was a moment of encouragement when local youngster Prakadeswaran found space in the middle of the box, but the 19-year-old could not bring the ball under control, and the chance slipped away. It was a miss that summed up Chennaiyin’s evening, especially as some of its more experienced players struggled to impose themselves as well.</p><p>Mohammedan continued to threaten sporadically. Chothe cut inside and combined quickly before dragging a long-range effort over the bar.</p><p>Then, with about 10 minutes remaining, Irfan floated in a cross with the outside of his boot, but Chima failed to hit the target, mistiming his volley for the second time in the match.</p><p>In the end, Chennaiyin did not do enough to force the issue, while Mohammedan may feel that, with greater composure in front of goal, it could have taken all three points.</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on Apr 21, 2026</p></div> #ISL #Mohammedan #holds #sluggish #Chennaiyin #goalless #draw

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10 Things From the 2000s That Are Suddenly Collectible—And Valuable

There is currently a tall, Texas-based teenage phenom named Cooper who’s well on his way to being one of the best, if not the best in his sport. When the Summer Olympics come to Los Angeles in 2028, he could have a gold medal around his neck.

…No, this is not about Cooper Flagg.

If you don’t know who Cooper Lutkenhaus is, it’s more than understandable given his sport isn’t all that popular outside of the Olympics. But you’ll definitely want to know and watch him over the next couple of years, starting with Day 1 of a special two-day Prefontaine Classic on Friday night (11:30 pm ET, Peacock/NBCSN) at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. It’s the biggest global annual track meet in the United States, and Lutkenhaus is the literal definition of a young star.

At just 17 years old, Lutkenhaus is track and field’s youngest ever indoor or outdoor world champion, having won the 800 meters final at the World Indoors back in March.

It could be the first of many medals for Lutkenhaus in the years to come.

The rise of Cooper Lutkenhaus

Lutkenhaus returns for his first race at fabled Hayward Field since he burst onto the scene at last summer’s USA Championships. Having qualified for the 800m final, Lutkenhaus shocked the track world (including himself) by storming to a second-place finish behind 2019 world champion Donavan Brazier, earning a spot at the Tokyo World Championships at just 16.

Lutkenhaus’ astonishingly quick 1:42.27 over two laps shattered his previous personal best by five seconds (!) and shattered the previous under-18 world record by more than a second.

The gargantuan jump in performance was out of the blue, but he’d been on an upward trajectory since picking up track in the eighth grade. Born into a family of track athletes, the 6’1 Lutkenhaus won consecutive Texas state titles as a high school freshman and sophomore, in addition to setting national high school indoor and outdoor records in the 800.

At the World Outdoors in Tokyo, Lutkenhaus was eliminated in the preliminary round, but it was nevertheless a valuable experience to compete versus elite international competition.

Lutkenhaus already turned pro, and the early results are scary good

While Lutkenhaus still plans to attend college, NIL and the NCAA won’t factor in. Nike wasted little time signing Lutkenhaus to a contract in August, and 2026 is Cooper’s first season as a professional. With no World Outdoor Championships or Olympics to prep for this year, this is about as seamless an on-ramp into the pro ranks as Lutkenhaus could get.

“Honestly, this is probably the best year I could’ve gone pro, just because there’s no major championships,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation. “Obviously there’s indoor, but indoor is not the main goal of everything. I’m happy the way it ended with a gold medal, but this was the perfect year. Obviously there’s one next year, so we’re just trying to get prepared for that.”

His first two appearances on the Wanda Diamond League circuit indicate that he’s prodigious.

In last month’s Diamond League debut in Stockholm, Lutkenhaus surged past 2023 world champion and 2024 Olympic silver medalist Marco Arop to notch his first victory as a pro. Arop later said of Lutkenhaus after the race, “He’s going to have many more special races ahead of him.”

Four days later in Oslo, Lutkenhaus leveled up again. Facing a loaded field headlined by Arop and 21-year-old reigning Olympic and World champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi, Lutkenhaus took the initiative and seized the lead with 200 meters to go. Just when it looked as if he’d gone too early and his inexperience would prove costly, Lutkenhaus summoned enough strength to hold off a fast-charging Wanyonyi at the line.

His 1:42.08 clocking set another new personal best and elevated him to joint-14th fastest 800m runner of all time.

The rapid times (and the wins, for that matter) won’t always happen for Lutkenhaus—especially not in an event that’s been consistently tightly contested among the best in the world for years. Unlike the sprints, middle- and long-distance races vary tactically in terms of early pace-setting, which can yield pedestrian times for runners who are more than capable of running faster. Championship races without designated pacemakers often devolve into bunched up packs before late kicks on the final lap. In the 800 meters, the fields are so talent-laden that quick, record-threatening or record-setting times are often required to win at the highest level. Of the 25 all-time fastest men’s 800m runners, 15 have set their personal bests since 2024. Lutkenhaus has quickly reached extraordinarily high standards at such a young age.

“To be able to come out here and race the best runners in the world [and] to be someone that people put in that category, it’s super exciting,” Lutkenhaus said post-race. “And the 800 over the past couple of years has, in my opinion, been the best event to watch.”

In 2028, Lutkenhaus could end a 56-year Olympic drought for American men

The men’s 800 has long been dominated by Kenya, with seven of the last 10 Olympic golds won by Kenyans, including back-to-back by iconic world record holder David Rudisha in 2012 and 2016. Not since Dave Wottle’s famous comeback in Munich 1972 has an American male won the Olympic final, while Brazier (2019) remains the only American to win a World Outdoor title in 20 editions and over 40 years of the competition.

Lutkenhaus will still be a teenager when the cauldron is lit for LA 2028. The strict qualification standards mean that he will have to finish in the top three at Olympic Trials in order to represent Team USA, which is no guarantee when there are other established Americans like Josh Hoey (the indoor world record holder), Bryce Hoppel (the American outdoor record holder), and Brazier (who’s reviving a career beset by injuries) to compete against. If he continues his ascension, he’ll be a serious contender to win gold and end the streak.

In the short- and long-term, for a sport that has struggled for stars with anywhere near the worldwide commercial appeal of Usain Bolt, Lutkenhaus has lofty goals that extend beyond compiling wins.

“You want to win as many titles as you can and have the records,” he told The Guardian. “But I also want people to look at me as someone that helped change the sport and someone they were excited to watch.”

“I want to make [the sport] more exciting, and I know that can be pretty vague,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation when asked to expand on what it meant to change the sport. “When I like to race, I kind of feel like that shows who I am as a person. Not afraid to step up when maybe someone else doesn’t want to, or put myself in a race where a lot of people maybe don’t think I belong. It’s been exciting to do it this year. I just want people to enjoy every race that I’m in.”

He’s exciting to watch right now, and the lifelong Dallas Cowboys fan—Tony Romo is his all-time favorite player—is on track to become one of those rare track household names by the end of the decade.

Lutkenhaus’ 800-meter race on Friday night begins at approximately 9:07 pm PT, and also includes the aforementioned Hoppel and Brazier.

#17yearold #track #star #Americas #sports #prodigies">Why this 17-year-old track star is one of America’s best sports prodigies  There is currently a tall, Texas-based teenage phenom named Cooper who’s well on his way to being one of the best, if not the best in his sport. When the Summer Olympics come to Los Angeles in 2028, he could have a gold medal around his neck.…No, this is not about Cooper Flagg.If you don’t know who Cooper Lutkenhaus is, it’s more than understandable given his sport isn’t all that popular outside of the Olympics. But you’ll definitely want to know and watch him over the next couple of years, starting with Day 1 of a special two-day Prefontaine Classic on Friday night (11:30 pm ET, Peacock/NBCSN) at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. It’s the biggest global annual track meet in the United States, and Lutkenhaus is the literal definition of a young star.At just 17 years old, Lutkenhaus is track and field’s youngest ever indoor or outdoor world champion, having won the 800 meters final at the World Indoors back in March.It could be the first of many medals for Lutkenhaus in the years to come.The rise of Cooper LutkenhausLutkenhaus returns for his first race at fabled Hayward Field since he burst onto the scene at last summer’s USA Championships. Having qualified for the 800m final, Lutkenhaus shocked the track world (including himself) by storming to a second-place finish behind 2019 world champion Donavan Brazier, earning a spot at the Tokyo World Championships at just 16.Lutkenhaus’ astonishingly quick 1:42.27 over two laps shattered his previous personal best by five seconds (!) and shattered the previous under-18 world record by more than a second.The gargantuan jump in performance was out of the blue, but he’d been on an upward trajectory since picking up track in the eighth grade. Born into a family of track athletes, the 6’1 Lutkenhaus won consecutive Texas state titles as a high school freshman and sophomore, in addition to setting national high school indoor and outdoor records in the 800.At the World Outdoors in Tokyo, Lutkenhaus was eliminated in the preliminary round, but it was nevertheless a valuable experience to compete versus elite international competition.Lutkenhaus already turned pro, and the early results are scary goodWhile Lutkenhaus still plans to attend college, NIL and the NCAA won’t factor in. Nike wasted little time signing Lutkenhaus to a contract in August, and 2026 is Cooper’s first season as a professional. With no World Outdoor Championships or Olympics to prep for this year, this is about as seamless an on-ramp into the pro ranks as Lutkenhaus could get.“Honestly, this is probably the best year I could’ve gone pro, just because there’s no major championships,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation. “Obviously there’s indoor, but indoor is not the main goal of everything. I’m happy the way it ended with a gold medal, but this was the perfect year. Obviously there’s one next year, so we’re just trying to get prepared for that.”His first two appearances on the Wanda Diamond League circuit indicate that he’s prodigious.In last month’s Diamond League debut in Stockholm, Lutkenhaus surged past 2023 world champion and 2024 Olympic silver medalist Marco Arop to notch his first victory as a pro. Arop later said of Lutkenhaus after the race, “He’s going to have many more special races ahead of him.”Four days later in Oslo, Lutkenhaus leveled up again. Facing a loaded field headlined by Arop and 21-year-old reigning Olympic and World champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi, Lutkenhaus took the initiative and seized the lead with 200 meters to go. Just when it looked as if he’d gone too early and his inexperience would prove costly, Lutkenhaus summoned enough strength to hold off a fast-charging Wanyonyi at the line.His 1:42.08 clocking set another new personal best and elevated him to joint-14th fastest 800m runner of all time.The rapid times (and the wins, for that matter) won’t always happen for Lutkenhaus—especially not in an event that’s been consistently tightly contested among the best in the world for years. Unlike the sprints, middle- and long-distance races vary tactically in terms of early pace-setting, which can yield pedestrian times for runners who are more than capable of running faster. Championship races without designated pacemakers often devolve into bunched up packs before late kicks on the final lap. In the 800 meters, the fields are so talent-laden that quick, record-threatening or record-setting times are often required to win at the highest level. Of the 25 all-time fastest men’s 800m runners, 15 have set their personal bests since 2024. Lutkenhaus has quickly reached extraordinarily high standards at such a young age.“To be able to come out here and race the best runners in the world [and] to be someone that people put in that category, it’s super exciting,” Lutkenhaus said post-race. “And the 800 over the past couple of years has, in my opinion, been the best event to watch.”In 2028, Lutkenhaus could end a 56-year Olympic drought for American menThe men’s 800 has long been dominated by Kenya, with seven of the last 10 Olympic golds won by Kenyans, including back-to-back by iconic world record holder David Rudisha in 2012 and 2016. Not since Dave Wottle’s famous comeback in Munich 1972 has an American male won the Olympic final, while Brazier (2019) remains the only American to win a World Outdoor title in 20 editions and over 40 years of the competition.Lutkenhaus will still be a teenager when the cauldron is lit for LA 2028. The strict qualification standards mean that he will have to finish in the top three at Olympic Trials in order to represent Team USA, which is no guarantee when there are other established Americans like Josh Hoey (the indoor world record holder), Bryce Hoppel (the American outdoor record holder), and Brazier (who’s reviving a career beset by injuries) to compete against. If he continues his ascension, he’ll be a serious contender to win gold and end the streak.In the short- and long-term, for a sport that has struggled for stars with anywhere near the worldwide commercial appeal of Usain Bolt, Lutkenhaus has lofty goals that extend beyond compiling wins.“You want to win as many titles as you can and have the records,” he told The Guardian. “But I also want people to look at me as someone that helped change the sport and someone they were excited to watch.”“I want to make [the sport] more exciting, and I know that can be pretty vague,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation when asked to expand on what it meant to change the sport. “When I like to race, I kind of feel like that shows who I am as a person. Not afraid to step up when maybe someone else doesn’t want to, or put myself in a race where a lot of people maybe don’t think I belong. It’s been exciting to do it this year. I just want people to enjoy every race that I’m in.”He’s exciting to watch right now, and the lifelong Dallas Cowboys fan—Tony Romo is his all-time favorite player—is on track to become one of those rare track household names by the end of the decade.Lutkenhaus’ 800-meter race on Friday night begins at approximately 9:07 pm PT, and also includes the aforementioned Hoppel and Brazier.  #17yearold #track #star #Americas #sports #prodigies

Nike wasted little time signing Lutkenhaus to a contract in August, and 2026 is Cooper’s first season as a professional. With no World Outdoor Championships or Olympics to prep for this year, this is about as seamless an on-ramp into the pro ranks as Lutkenhaus could get.

“Honestly, this is probably the best year I could’ve gone pro, just because there’s no major championships,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation. “Obviously there’s indoor, but indoor is not the main goal of everything. I’m happy the way it ended with a gold medal, but this was the perfect year. Obviously there’s one next year, so we’re just trying to get prepared for that.”

His first two appearances on the Wanda Diamond League circuit indicate that he’s prodigious.

In last month’s Diamond League debut in Stockholm, Lutkenhaus surged past 2023 world champion and 2024 Olympic silver medalist Marco Arop to notch his first victory as a pro. Arop later said of Lutkenhaus after the race, “He’s going to have many more special races ahead of him.”

Four days later in Oslo, Lutkenhaus leveled up again. Facing a loaded field headlined by Arop and 21-year-old reigning Olympic and World champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi, Lutkenhaus took the initiative and seized the lead with 200 meters to go. Just when it looked as if he’d gone too early and his inexperience would prove costly, Lutkenhaus summoned enough strength to hold off a fast-charging Wanyonyi at the line.

His 1:42.08 clocking set another new personal best and elevated him to joint-14th fastest 800m runner of all time.

The rapid times (and the wins, for that matter) won’t always happen for Lutkenhaus—especially not in an event that’s been consistently tightly contested among the best in the world for years. Unlike the sprints, middle- and long-distance races vary tactically in terms of early pace-setting, which can yield pedestrian times for runners who are more than capable of running faster. Championship races without designated pacemakers often devolve into bunched up packs before late kicks on the final lap. In the 800 meters, the fields are so talent-laden that quick, record-threatening or record-setting times are often required to win at the highest level. Of the 25 all-time fastest men’s 800m runners, 15 have set their personal bests since 2024. Lutkenhaus has quickly reached extraordinarily high standards at such a young age.

“To be able to come out here and race the best runners in the world [and] to be someone that people put in that category, it’s super exciting,” Lutkenhaus said post-race. “And the 800 over the past couple of years has, in my opinion, been the best event to watch.”

In 2028, Lutkenhaus could end a 56-year Olympic drought for American men

The men’s 800 has long been dominated by Kenya, with seven of the last 10 Olympic golds won by Kenyans, including back-to-back by iconic world record holder David Rudisha in 2012 and 2016. Not since Dave Wottle’s famous comeback in Munich 1972 has an American male won the Olympic final, while Brazier (2019) remains the only American to win a World Outdoor title in 20 editions and over 40 years of the competition.

Lutkenhaus will still be a teenager when the cauldron is lit for LA 2028. The strict qualification standards mean that he will have to finish in the top three at Olympic Trials in order to represent Team USA, which is no guarantee when there are other established Americans like Josh Hoey (the indoor world record holder), Bryce Hoppel (the American outdoor record holder), and Brazier (who’s reviving a career beset by injuries) to compete against. If he continues his ascension, he’ll be a serious contender to win gold and end the streak.

In the short- and long-term, for a sport that has struggled for stars with anywhere near the worldwide commercial appeal of Usain Bolt, Lutkenhaus has lofty goals that extend beyond compiling wins.

“You want to win as many titles as you can and have the records,” he told The Guardian. “But I also want people to look at me as someone that helped change the sport and someone they were excited to watch.”

“I want to make [the sport] more exciting, and I know that can be pretty vague,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation when asked to expand on what it meant to change the sport. “When I like to race, I kind of feel like that shows who I am as a person. Not afraid to step up when maybe someone else doesn’t want to, or put myself in a race where a lot of people maybe don’t think I belong. It’s been exciting to do it this year. I just want people to enjoy every race that I’m in.”

He’s exciting to watch right now, and the lifelong Dallas Cowboys fan—Tony Romo is his all-time favorite player—is on track to become one of those rare track household names by the end of the decade.

Lutkenhaus’ 800-meter race on Friday night begins at approximately 9:07 pm PT, and also includes the aforementioned Hoppel and Brazier.

#17yearold #track #star #Americas #sports #prodigies">Why this 17-year-old track star is one of America’s best sports prodigies

There is currently a tall, Texas-based teenage phenom named Cooper who’s well on his way to being one of the best, if not the best in his sport. When the Summer Olympics come to Los Angeles in 2028, he could have a gold medal around his neck.

…No, this is not about Cooper Flagg.

If you don’t know who Cooper Lutkenhaus is, it’s more than understandable given his sport isn’t all that popular outside of the Olympics. But you’ll definitely want to know and watch him over the next couple of years, starting with Day 1 of a special two-day Prefontaine Classic on Friday night (11:30 pm ET, Peacock/NBCSN) at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. It’s the biggest global annual track meet in the United States, and Lutkenhaus is the literal definition of a young star.

At just 17 years old, Lutkenhaus is track and field’s youngest ever indoor or outdoor world champion, having won the 800 meters final at the World Indoors back in March.

It could be the first of many medals for Lutkenhaus in the years to come.

The rise of Cooper Lutkenhaus

Lutkenhaus returns for his first race at fabled Hayward Field since he burst onto the scene at last summer’s USA Championships. Having qualified for the 800m final, Lutkenhaus shocked the track world (including himself) by storming to a second-place finish behind 2019 world champion Donavan Brazier, earning a spot at the Tokyo World Championships at just 16.

Lutkenhaus’ astonishingly quick 1:42.27 over two laps shattered his previous personal best by five seconds (!) and shattered the previous under-18 world record by more than a second.

The gargantuan jump in performance was out of the blue, but he’d been on an upward trajectory since picking up track in the eighth grade. Born into a family of track athletes, the 6’1 Lutkenhaus won consecutive Texas state titles as a high school freshman and sophomore, in addition to setting national high school indoor and outdoor records in the 800.

At the World Outdoors in Tokyo, Lutkenhaus was eliminated in the preliminary round, but it was nevertheless a valuable experience to compete versus elite international competition.

Lutkenhaus already turned pro, and the early results are scary good

While Lutkenhaus still plans to attend college, NIL and the NCAA won’t factor in. Nike wasted little time signing Lutkenhaus to a contract in August, and 2026 is Cooper’s first season as a professional. With no World Outdoor Championships or Olympics to prep for this year, this is about as seamless an on-ramp into the pro ranks as Lutkenhaus could get.

“Honestly, this is probably the best year I could’ve gone pro, just because there’s no major championships,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation. “Obviously there’s indoor, but indoor is not the main goal of everything. I’m happy the way it ended with a gold medal, but this was the perfect year. Obviously there’s one next year, so we’re just trying to get prepared for that.”

His first two appearances on the Wanda Diamond League circuit indicate that he’s prodigious.

In last month’s Diamond League debut in Stockholm, Lutkenhaus surged past 2023 world champion and 2024 Olympic silver medalist Marco Arop to notch his first victory as a pro. Arop later said of Lutkenhaus after the race, “He’s going to have many more special races ahead of him.”

Four days later in Oslo, Lutkenhaus leveled up again. Facing a loaded field headlined by Arop and 21-year-old reigning Olympic and World champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi, Lutkenhaus took the initiative and seized the lead with 200 meters to go. Just when it looked as if he’d gone too early and his inexperience would prove costly, Lutkenhaus summoned enough strength to hold off a fast-charging Wanyonyi at the line.

His 1:42.08 clocking set another new personal best and elevated him to joint-14th fastest 800m runner of all time.

The rapid times (and the wins, for that matter) won’t always happen for Lutkenhaus—especially not in an event that’s been consistently tightly contested among the best in the world for years. Unlike the sprints, middle- and long-distance races vary tactically in terms of early pace-setting, which can yield pedestrian times for runners who are more than capable of running faster. Championship races without designated pacemakers often devolve into bunched up packs before late kicks on the final lap. In the 800 meters, the fields are so talent-laden that quick, record-threatening or record-setting times are often required to win at the highest level. Of the 25 all-time fastest men’s 800m runners, 15 have set their personal bests since 2024. Lutkenhaus has quickly reached extraordinarily high standards at such a young age.

“To be able to come out here and race the best runners in the world [and] to be someone that people put in that category, it’s super exciting,” Lutkenhaus said post-race. “And the 800 over the past couple of years has, in my opinion, been the best event to watch.”

In 2028, Lutkenhaus could end a 56-year Olympic drought for American men

The men’s 800 has long been dominated by Kenya, with seven of the last 10 Olympic golds won by Kenyans, including back-to-back by iconic world record holder David Rudisha in 2012 and 2016. Not since Dave Wottle’s famous comeback in Munich 1972 has an American male won the Olympic final, while Brazier (2019) remains the only American to win a World Outdoor title in 20 editions and over 40 years of the competition.

Lutkenhaus will still be a teenager when the cauldron is lit for LA 2028. The strict qualification standards mean that he will have to finish in the top three at Olympic Trials in order to represent Team USA, which is no guarantee when there are other established Americans like Josh Hoey (the indoor world record holder), Bryce Hoppel (the American outdoor record holder), and Brazier (who’s reviving a career beset by injuries) to compete against. If he continues his ascension, he’ll be a serious contender to win gold and end the streak.

In the short- and long-term, for a sport that has struggled for stars with anywhere near the worldwide commercial appeal of Usain Bolt, Lutkenhaus has lofty goals that extend beyond compiling wins.

“You want to win as many titles as you can and have the records,” he told The Guardian. “But I also want people to look at me as someone that helped change the sport and someone they were excited to watch.”

“I want to make [the sport] more exciting, and I know that can be pretty vague,” Lutkenhaus told SB Nation when asked to expand on what it meant to change the sport. “When I like to race, I kind of feel like that shows who I am as a person. Not afraid to step up when maybe someone else doesn’t want to, or put myself in a race where a lot of people maybe don’t think I belong. It’s been exciting to do it this year. I just want people to enjoy every race that I’m in.”

He’s exciting to watch right now, and the lifelong Dallas Cowboys fan—Tony Romo is his all-time favorite player—is on track to become one of those rare track household names by the end of the decade.

Lutkenhaus’ 800-meter race on Friday night begins at approximately 9:07 pm PT, and also includes the aforementioned Hoppel and Brazier.

#17yearold #track #star #Americas #sports #prodigies

Opener Lahiru Udara compiled a maiden century in a 215-run partnership with Kamindu Mendis which lifted Sri Lanka from 25-2 to 338-5 against West Indies at stumps on the first day of the second Test on Friday.

Udara fell for 188 in the last hour of the day, having wiped away his previous highest score in three Tests of 40 and set up Sri Lanka’s innings after it won the toss.

He added a further 93 for the third wicket with captain Dhananjaya da Silva (33) whose dismissal, also in the last hour, gave Jayden Seales his 100th wicket in his 28th Test.

Sonal Dinusha was 5 and Kusal Mendis 0 not out at stumps. They will resume on Saturday against the second new ball which is only two overs old.

Kamindu made 84 in a stand which was a record for all wickets for Sri Lanka in the West Indies. He was out to a sharp stumping by Shai Hope, who returned to the West Indies team after missing the first test with a shoulder injury.

West Indies won the first Test by an innings and 217 runs to lead the two-Test series.

Udara and Kamindu came together in the eighth over of the day after Sri Lanka lost two early wickets in a hostile first spell from Shamar Joseph.

Nishan Madushka (6) was caught at point by Brandon King in Joseph’s second over and King moved to short midwicket to catch Dinesh Chandimal who scored a single off 15 balls as Sri Lanka struggled against the new ball.

Udara and Kamindu counterattacked against the four West Indies quicks at nearly five runs per over and Udara completed his half-century off 59 balls with his eighth boundary.

He went on to reach his century from only 117 deliveries with 13 fours and three sixes as Sri Lanka maintained a high scoring rate through the second session in which it added 125 runs without loss.

Kamindu and Udara had some good fortune. Udara was dropped at second slip in the first session and Kamindu escaped when West Indies chose not to review a not out decision for caught behind. When West Indies did review it was unsuccessful.

Udara finally fell to a relatively innocuous delivery from Alzarri Joseph in the over before the arrival of the second new ball. He attempted to pull a short delivery outside off stump but skied the ball to Joseph on the boundary at fine leg. Udara faced 248 balls and hit 21 fours and five sixes.

West Indies made two changes to its first Test lineup. Hope returned after injury and Joshua de Silva made way and Kemar Roach was ruled out due to a hamstring injury.

Udara replaced opening batter Pathum Nissanka while experienced spinner Prabath Jayasuriya came in for injured fast bowler Lahiru Kumara. Isitha Wijesundara was stood down for Kasun Rajitha.

Published on Jul 04, 2026

#2nd #Test #Udara #hits #Sri #Lanka #reaches #West #Indies #day">WI vs SL, 2nd Test: Udara hits 188 as Sri Lanka reaches 338-5 against West Indies on day 1  Opener Lahiru Udara compiled a maiden century in a 215-run partnership with Kamindu Mendis which lifted Sri Lanka from 25-2 to 338-5 against West Indies at stumps on the first day of the second Test on Friday.Udara fell for 188 in the last hour of the day, having wiped away his previous highest score in three Tests of 40 and set up Sri Lanka’s innings after it won the toss.He added a further 93 for the third wicket with captain Dhananjaya da Silva (33) whose dismissal, also in the last hour, gave Jayden Seales his 100th wicket in his 28th Test.Sonal Dinusha was 5 and Kusal Mendis 0 not out at stumps. They will resume on Saturday against the second new ball which is only two overs old.Kamindu made 84 in a stand which was a record for all wickets for Sri Lanka in the West Indies. He was out to a sharp stumping by Shai Hope, who returned to the West Indies team after missing the first test with a shoulder injury.West Indies won the first Test by an innings and 217 runs to lead the two-Test series.Udara and Kamindu came together in the eighth over of the day after Sri Lanka lost two early wickets in a hostile first spell from Shamar Joseph.Nishan Madushka (6) was caught at point by Brandon King in Joseph’s second over and King moved to short midwicket to catch Dinesh Chandimal who scored a single off 15 balls as Sri Lanka struggled against the new ball.Udara and Kamindu counterattacked against the four West Indies quicks at nearly five runs per over and Udara completed his half-century off 59 balls with his eighth boundary.He went on to reach his century from only 117 deliveries with 13 fours and three sixes as Sri Lanka maintained a high scoring rate through the second session in which it added 125 runs without loss.Kamindu and Udara had some good fortune. Udara was dropped at second slip in the first session and Kamindu escaped when West Indies chose not to review a not out decision for caught behind. When West Indies did review it was unsuccessful.Udara finally fell to a relatively innocuous delivery from Alzarri Joseph in the over before the arrival of the second new ball. He attempted to pull a short delivery outside off stump but skied the ball to Joseph on the boundary at fine leg. Udara faced 248 balls and hit 21 fours and five sixes.West Indies made two changes to its first Test lineup. Hope returned after injury and Joshua de Silva made way and Kemar Roach was ruled out due to a hamstring injury.Udara replaced opening batter Pathum Nissanka while experienced spinner Prabath Jayasuriya came in for injured fast bowler Lahiru Kumara. Isitha Wijesundara was stood down for Kasun Rajitha.Published on Jul 04, 2026  #2nd #Test #Udara #hits #Sri #Lanka #reaches #West #Indies #day

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