San Francisco Chronicle

Sprinter hits sizzling 4.12 in 40-yard dash, eyes Olympics

- By Steve Megargee Steve Megargee is an Associated Press writer.

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — There’s video of a Tennessee Volunteer running the 40yard dash faster than anyone ever has at the NFL combine.

Except he didn’t get drafted. He’s not even a football player. He did it for fun, and then watched the video gain traction on social media.

It just might have signaled Christian Coleman’s arrival as one of the top young American sprinters. At a time when the U.S. is seeking polished young sprinters, as Tyson Gay and Justin Gatlin enter their mid-30s, Coleman is an intriguing contender.

“I definitely look at the opportunit­y and hope I can take advantage of it,” Coleman said. “You’ve got older guys, they came in and really laid the groundwork for USA Track and Field. Those are some of the guys that I looked up to growing up running track.

“To be able to be looked at as one of the guys that can potentiall­y come in and take their place as they move out of the sport, that’s a pretty cool opportunit­y.”

Coleman, who ran on the U.S. Olympic 4x100 team in a qualifying heat at last year’s Rio Games, won the NCAA indoor championsh­ips in the 60-meter (6.45) and 200-meter dash (20.11) in March. He is undefeated in individual events during the NCAA outdoor season heading into this week’s SEC championsh­ips in Columbia, S.C.

After his junior season concludes, Coleman will compete in the USA outdoor track and field championsh­ips next month in Sacramento. Coleman says he won’t decide until after the NCAA season whether to return to Tennessee for his senior year or turn pro.

Perhaps his best-known performanc­e didn’t even count.

Less than a week after the NCAA indoor championsh­ips, Tennessee recorded Coleman running the 40 in 4.12 seconds at the school’s indoor athletic facility. For comparison’s sake, the fastest 40 ever posted at the NFL combine was 4.22, done this year by Cincinnati wide receiver John Ross, a firstround draft pick from Washington.

Tennessee’s track program put the video of Coleman’s 4.12 40 on social media May 1, two days after the conclusion of the NFL draft. It has introduced Coleman to a much wider audience.

The video has been viewed more than 3.3 million times on Facebook over the past week. Coleman said he got a couple thousand more Twitter followers as the video went viral.

“When they were making the video, we figured it would get a lot of views because it was a pretty fast 40,” he said. “I don’t know how I really feel about it. I got a lot of publicity for it. It was just a cool little deal.”

As impressive as Coleman looked in that video, he might be capable of much more.

Tennessee coach Beth Alford-Sullivan noted that the video was shot after Coleman had taken some time to rest his tired legs after the NCAA indoor championsh­ips.

“I think he can run even faster, but he’d taken (about) a week off at that point,” Alford-Sullivan said. Coleman agrees. “I wasn’t really in my best sprint form,” Coleman said. “We kind of just went out there and did it. I feel I could probably run faster, but, you know, it’s pretty good.”

Other athletes noticed. U.S. Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones tweeted: “This is great. Can football players please stop asking to race us trackies now? Matter settled.” Tennessee football coach Butch Jones retweeted the video, asking Coleman, “What’s your cleat size?”

Coleman was a high school cornerback and receiver in Atlanta. He has two older brothers who played football, at Harvard and Colgate, but Coleman realized he had a brighter future in track.

“I had a couple of (football) offers from really small schools — (Division) II, a couple of I-AA schools,” he said. “But I had other opportunit­ies, of course, to run at SEC schools for track . ... It just seemed like the best situation for me.”

Coleman hasn’t looked back since then.

“I wasn’t really in my best sprint form . ... I feel I could probably run faster, but, you know, it’s pretty good.” Christian Coleman, Tennessee sprinter

 ?? Michael Wyke / Associated Press ?? Tennessee’s Christian Coleman wins the 200-meter dash ahead of LSU’s Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake at the NCAA indoor track and field championsh­ips in College Station, Texas.
Michael Wyke / Associated Press Tennessee’s Christian Coleman wins the 200-meter dash ahead of LSU’s Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake at the NCAA indoor track and field championsh­ips in College Station, Texas.

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