Intentar ORO - Gratis

Helping Fast Teens Become Lifelong Runners

Runner's World

|

Issue 3, 2021

Fans of running love to watch teens rewrite the record books. We love their exuberance, their unpolished style, and the way they morph from serious athlete to gleeful child in the time it takes to cross a finish line.

- JULIA LUCAS

Helping Fast Teens Become Lifelong Runners

Even with limited chances to compete during the past year’s quarantine, young runners have given us a lot to cheer for. Already this year, Hobbs Kessler, at 17 years old, set a new high school boys’ indoor mile record of 3:57.66, and last fall 16-year-old Jenna Hutchins became the first high school girl ever to break 16 minutes in a cross-country 5K.

Perhaps brightest of all, 18-year-old Athing Mu, a freshman at Texas A&M, ran an astounding 1:58.4 in the indoor 800 meters. That’s not only an NCAA record, it ranks her amongst the fastest women in the world. As she rounds the track far ahead of her competitors, it’s hard not to skip straight to the future— how much faster can she go?

These teens are at the highest level in the sport, but they share a circumstance with many other young runners. After a breakthrough race, excited by their own talent and eager to explore their potential, it can be hard for them to imagine a future beyond the next race.

This is a moment when it’s especially important for a young athlete to have a support network that prioritizes their long-term success and wellness. To both support and protect a young runner is a big task, and they can benefit from thoughtful consideration by parents, coaches, and even fans—when does encouragement turn to expectation? When does excitement turn to pressure or hard work to compulsion? Is it possible to run fast now, and still find running rewarding for the rest of their lives?

Pay attention to small changes

One of the most important elements in guiding an athlete is to note small emotional shifts. “If something seems off—it doesn’t have to be the extreme—any shift in the overall mood or the way they’re approaching the sport can be an indication of larger issues,” says Magin Day, a doctoral candidate in clinical psychology and a former Division I NCAA runner.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Runner's World

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

THE RUNNER'S WORLD GUIDE TO STRENGTH TRAINING

At 17, Winnie Yu was a high school track-and-field runner with a bright future.

time to read

6 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

THE MARATHON THAT NEARLY WRECKED ME: A LOVE LETTER

DEAR NEW YORK CITY

time to read

4 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

THE SHOES THAT SILENCED MY INNER CRITIC

AROUND THIS TIME last year, I arrived at the Runner’s World office and was greeted by a bright orange shoebox sitting on my desk. I had signed up the day before to become a shoe tester, and the box heralded my first assignment. Excited, I rushed to open it, finding a pair of Nike Zoom Fly 6s inside—in bright pink.

time to read

4 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

7 LESSONS I LEARNED FROM RUNNING 35 MARATHONS

IN THE 20-PLUS years I’ve been running marathons, I’ve made just about every mistake possible.

time to read

3 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

INTO THE VOID

Wildly fluctuating temperatures, punishing grades, brushes with mountain lions—the Grand Canyon’s Rim to Rim to Rim endurance run is not for the faint of heart.

time to read

13 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

THE BEST NEW SHOES

The first wave of super shoes ushered in a lightweight and bouncy new foam. Since then, new advances in tech and compounds have made shoes even lighter, softer, and faster— and not just racers. Super shoe tech is trickling down to daily training shoes.

time to read

13 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

Jeannie Rice Knows Something the Rest of Us Don't

It's not about talent. It's not about training. The 77-year-old, record-smashing marathoner has tapped into an ineffable force that defies her age— and she'll never stop chasing it.

time to read

17 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

STARTING OVERTHIS TIME SOBER

I'VE RUN ALL over New York City, but lacing up my Hokas in the community room of a rehab center in Midtown Manhattan was definitely a first.

time to read

5 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

AM I WEIRD OR WAS THIS FUN?

AS I SAT in the passenger seat of my friend Tom’s blue Mazda—with a teal bandana tied tightly around my face—I thought: I hope no one calls the police. After all, I could have been mistaken for an abductee.

time to read

4 mins

Winter 2025

Runner's World US

Runner's World US

BEHIND BARS, RUNNING WAS FREEDOM

Alsu Kurmasheva was jailed in a Russian prison on false charges. Separated from her family with no end in sight, she turned to the one thing that kept her hope alive.

time to read

27 mins

Summer 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size