Australian high schooler runs 3:55 mile, beating pros
At 16 years and 259 days, Cameron Myers of Canberra is the second-youngest person in history to break the four-minute mile barrier
Photo by: Joanna Margiolis/Athletics VictoriaAt the first World Athletics Continental Tour Gold meet of the 2023 season in Melbourne on Thursday, a Grade 11 student from Canberra, Cameron Myers, became the second-youngest person in history to break the four-minute mile barrier, at 16 years and 259 days, setting a new U16 world record of 3:55.44.
A 3:55 mile as a 16-year-old 🤯
Cameron Myers (pictured in orange) clocked a 3:55.44 PB to finish third behind @ollie_hoare97 and Sam Tanner in the John Landy Mile at Maurie Plant Meet in Melbourne 🇦🇺
No one in history has gone faster at his age 🔥#ContinentalTour pic.twitter.com/iOtl5RdWof
— AW (@AthleticsWeekly) February 23, 2023
Myers placed third in the men’s mile at the Maurie Plant Classic, behind 2022 Commonwealth Games 1,500m champion Olli Hoare and New Zealand’s Sam Tanner, and beating a lengthy list of pros, including 2016 Olympic 1,500m champion Matt Centrowitz.
The 16-year-old is the second youngest runner in history to break four minutes in the mile; the youngest was Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen. Ingebrigtsen first went sub-four at age 16 years and 250 days, when he ran 3:58.04 at the 2017 Prefontaine Classic in Oregon. Myers, who is only nine days older than Ingebrigtsen was then, produced a quicker time than Ingebrigtsen when he first went sub-4.
Myers’s run stripped an incredible 12 seconds off his previous mile personal best of 4:07.04. His time also broke Ingebrigtsen’s U16 world record of 3:56.29 from the 2017 Bislett Games in Oslo.
“At 16, it’s impressive to see Myers running better than most college athletes in the U.S.,” said Hoare to reporters post-race. “He’s an amazing talent for Australia moving forward, and I’m excited for him.”
Hoare won the mile in 3:52.24, coming off a bronze-medal performance in the mixed relay team event at the World Cross Country Championships in Bathurst last weekend. Hoare’s time was the third-fastest mile time in history by an Australian.
Two Canadian athletes also competed in Melbourne–John Gay placed 10th in the men’s 3,000m in 8:03.91, while Erin Teschuk was 13th in the women’s 1,500m. Both athletes represented Canada at the 2023 World XC Championships five days ago.
Check here for full results from the 2023 Maurie Plant Classic in Melbourne.