Viral moment displays Michael Walker Jr.'s rising star as Indiana high school sprinter
· Yahoo Sports
The baton dropped to the ground before Michael Walker Jr. scooped it up and started his turn in the 4x200-meter relay.
A botched exchange put Walker and the Hammond Morton boys track team behind the pack at a meet during the indoor season.
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“In the moment, we were looking at the baton — it was slow motion for me,” Walker said. “All I know is I’m just locked in and do what I always do.”
Trailing behind, the sophomore avoided a collision on the curve. He used a jab step to steer clear of traffic before he bolted into the straight pathway on the anchor leg.
Stride for stride, he made up for lost ground. He tracked down each runner one by one, then blew past them for the win.
It was a viral moment that wowed social media viewers and those who witnessed his excellence in person. It was a clutch performance that showcased his speed and mental toughness as an Indiana high school track star.
“Most of the times when people drop the baton, they kind of just quit the race,” said Hammond Morton coach Rob Gardner. “For him to have the instinct to just pick it up and do what he (did) … I’m looking at the people around and they were (going) crazy. I had never seen it before.
“I’m not surprised that he had the mindset to finish the race. I am surprised how he hawked everybody down after dropping the baton. That was crazy.”
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Walker stayed composed in a moment of chaos. He triumphed with his work ethic, the same mindset that earned him the state’s best time in the 100 meters (10.64) and 200 meters (21.42) this season.
The Hammond Morton prodigy started his ascent to prominence back at Charles N. Scott Middle School. For a youngster that was always fast, he started playing sports to stay active. He was a standout football and basketball player whose speed was the talk of the town.
In basketball, he dominated conditioning drills. On the football field, he was a guy that wrecked opponents when he had the ball in his hands.
Havel Jones, a former Scott and current Hammond Morton football coach, heard of Walker’s speed before he witnessed it live. During the first game of his eighth-grade season, Walker flashed his speed against the team’s rival school.
“The quarterback, he seen an open guy in the flats … and he threw the ball to the flats and out of nowhere you see No. 3 Mike Walker,” Jones said. “He catches a pick and takes it to the house. Whatever the kids were telling me, I seen it for myself. I was like,’ Wow, this kid is fast’. Just raw talent.”
He was just as special on the track. According to Walker, he never lost a race in eighth grade. That unbeaten run served as a prelude for what was to come in high school.
As a freshman, he was a member of the 4x100 team that placed third at the outdoor state track meet. As a sophomore, he qualified for the 2026 New Balance Nationals Indoor Championships in Boston. He placed sixth in the 200-meter finals and 13th in the 60-meter semifinals.
Walker has racked up multiple wins during the outdoor high school season. At the first meet of the year, he hit a personal best in the 100 meters (10.64) and 200 meters (21.42) at the Chris Nicolini Invitational on March 30. He helped the team’s 4x100 team place first at that same meet before the quartet won gold at the Ed Woodrick Invite on April 11.
“The jump from last year to this year has been tremendous,” Gardner said. “He’s already … placed at the New Balance nationals and an All-American track runner now. But I mean, if you know Mike, you know this was coming just because of his hard work.
“You got a lot of guys who is talented, Mike is really talented, (with) god-gifted talent, but Mike still shows up to work every single day ... and you can’t ask for more than that when you got the kid who now pretty much is viral. He’s got the middle school kids coming up here asking to get a picture, but he never lets that get to his head.”
Even his comeback went viral, Walker stayed humble. In an era when social media can inflate an athletes ego, he remained a model student-athlete.
“He’s an inspiration for the younger kids and he even motivates his peers,” Jones said. “There’s a lot of talent in our football and track team. They’re watching him. They may not say it but they’re watching him. He’s carrying the torch and setting a great example for everybody.”
Judging by the strong start to his outdoor season, Walker will be a major problem for the opposition. His mission is to run 10 seconds in the 100 meters and 21 seconds in the 200 meters. His personal records are flirting with both of those times.
Greatness drives Walker's ambition. Today's version of him is not his final form. He has stayed true to the process and reaped the rewards for his hard work. Walker's speed and mental fortitude form a formula of greatness that he is determined to achieve.
“I want to go to the next level and to do that, you always have to work hard and always do what you got to do,” Walker said. “Don’t give up on what you’re doing, always be humble. I never let things get to my head … I don’t let people change who I am, so I just am being Michael.”
Marc Ray is a high school sports reporter at the IndyStar. He can be reached at [email protected] , and on X, formerly Twitter, at @themarcszn.
This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: IHSAA track: Hammond Morton sophomore Michael Walker Jr. is a speedster