VideoThe 18-year-old sprinting sensation won the National Under-20s 100-metre final with a time of 10.

Sprinting legend Usain Bolt says he hopes Australian teenage phenom Gout Gout “finds the right people” to have around him as the 18-year-old continues his meteoric rise in the world of track and field.

The Australian has set the sport alight with a series of eye-catching performances that have seen parallels drawn between him and the widely regarded greatest sprinter of all time.

So much so that Bolt has previously said that the wonder kid Aussie “looks like young me”.

Gout generated global headlines earlier this month by claiming the 200m at the senior Australian championships in Sydney in an astonishing 19.67 seconds.

Not only did he set a new under-20 world record, the Queenslander surpassed the time of 19.93 seconds set by the Jamaican in 2004.

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Bolt was just 17 back then and never improved on that time as a teenager.

Camera IconGout Gout has smashed his Australian 200m record, breaking 20 seconds for the first time. Credit: AAP

With increased success and growing stardom comes greater scrutiny and susceptibility to distraction – something Bolt is all too aware of, having been in Gout’s shoes.

“At that young age, because I was there, you start getting put left and right and then you forget track and field,” he told CNN, speaking at the watchmaking show, Watches and Wonders, in Geneva, Switzerland.

“Hopefully, he has the right set of people to guide him and keep him focused on track and field because the rest of the stuff will always be there.

“But if you mess up on track and field, then it all goes away.”

Diamond League showdown

With every Gout improvement sparking a media frenzy in Australia, the teenager now has his sights sets on the international stage.

It was recently confirmed that the sprint sensation will make his senior debut on the Diamond League circuit, athletics’ premier global series, in Oslo, Norway on June 10.

And it won’t be any old race. It’s set to be a 200m showdown against none other than the reigning Olympic champion, Letsile Tebogo.

The Botswana athlete has already showered praise on Gout, saying last year that he has the potential to be one of the greatest athletes in history.

Excitement and anticipation will undoubtedly mount in the coming months, but Bolt is wary of setting expectations too high as he transitions into the sport’s upper echelon.

“It’s so big … It’s totally different,” he recalls.

“I remember coming out of high school going on the circuit, I felt like I was on top of the world because I was winning and running good.

“When I got on the circuit, I didn’t win one race!

“I know it’s going to be an eye-opener, and I hope it doesn’t get him down but motivate him to work even harder.

“I think in the first year you will learn a lot and understand what you need to do to be better.”

‘Every day is not gonna be a great day’

Gout won’t be taking part at this year’s Commonwealth Games as he focuses on pursuing gold at the World Athletics U20 Championships in Oregon in August.

It was back in 2002 at these championships (formerly known as World Junior Championships) where Bolt announced himself as a sprint prodigy.

Racing in front of his home fans in Jamaica’s National Stadium in Kingston, Bolt – just 15 years old at the time –won the 200m, becoming the youngest-ever male world junior champion in any event.

Fast forward 24 years, Gout will be one of the favorites in the same race as he seeks new heights in his ever-upwards trajectory.

“He’s a massive young talent,” the Jamaican says.

“Every time you step on that track, everybody’s going to always be looking for a fast time, always looking for you to do great, so hopefully he has the right people to help him to understand that not every day is gonna be a great day.”

Regardless of whether he succeeds, the talk around the young contender to Bolt has given the sport a shot in the arm at a time when it’s battling for new eyeballs and still, in part, seeking one or multiple personalities to fill the void left by the indomitable Jamaican.

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