Calgary Herald

Canada’s De Grasse on track to superstard­om

- LORI EWING

TORONTO Sitting in the stands at a high school track meet in Toronto three years ago, Tony Sharpe couldn’t help but notice Andre De Grasse. It was the start of the senior boys 100 metres and seven runners were coiled tightly in their starting blocks, all sleek tights and expensive spikes.

The eighth runner was De Grasse, who stood, facing sideways, watching the starter like he was waiting to see the drop of an arm to signal the start. His attire: baggy basketball shorts and borrowed shoes.

“The gun goes off, and Andre turns, just kinda swings around like a shortstop and runs down the track in 10.9 (seconds),” Sharpe said. “As a coach, I know 10.9. You can’t do 10.9 in basketball shorts, starting sideways.”

De Grasse ran that day on a whim, invited to the meet by a high school friend. It was the turning point for the Markham, Ont., teen who was hanging with the wrong crowd and, just weeks away from graduating, had no idea where he was headed. Sharpe had a pretty good idea.

Three years later, the 20-year-old De Grasse is on pace to be Canada’s greatest sprinter ever. At the Pac 12 conference championsh­ips last weekend, he broke the Canadian record in the 200 metres, and ran 9.97 in the 100, the fastest clocked by a Canadian in 16 years.

Sprinters can go their entire careers dreaming about breaking 10 seconds, and never do it. De Grasse has done it in just three years, and is now the third-fastest Canadian, not including the steroid-enhanced Ben Johnson, over the distance. The two men ahead of him: Donovan Bailey and Bruny Surin.

“Yeah, this kid is pretty special,” said Sharpe, who spent the week fielding calls from agents, who can sign De Grasse after his senior year at USC.

De Grasse is also nonchalant about his accomplish­ments on the track. The sociology student has been more focused on school this week, juggling a tough schedule of classes and training.

He wasn’t surprised, he said, by his times at the Pac 12 meet.

“My coach has been telling me I could run these times,” he said.

He hadn’t clicked on the most recent world track and field rankings to see his name.

“Nah, but people were telling me I was second in the 200,” he said — like it happens every day. “I feel like I’m still the underdog, I’ve only been doing the sport for three years, so I’m still learning stuff.”

That’s the part of De Grasse that Sharpe loves best. “He’s the most humble athlete I’ve ever come across,” the coach said.

Sharpe introduced himself to De Grasse at that track meet three years ago at York University, offering to teach him how to use starting blocks. By the end of the summer, De Grasse was running 10.5, good enough to earn a scholarshi­p to Coffeyvill­e Community College in Kansas. He would transfer to USC after two years.

Analyzing rates of progressio­n, Sharpe believes if De Grasse continues to mature and get stronger, “there’s no reason he can’t run mid-9.5s.”

 ?? ALEX GALLARDO/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? USC’s Andre De Grasse wins the 200-metre race against Terrance Chambers, left, and Jaysean Skrine, right, in the Pac 12 track and field competitio­n in L.A. on May 16.
ALEX GALLARDO/ THE CANADIAN PRESS USC’s Andre De Grasse wins the 200-metre race against Terrance Chambers, left, and Jaysean Skrine, right, in the Pac 12 track and field competitio­n in L.A. on May 16.

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