Live stream: Watch the Little Athletics Queensland State Championships 2025
The Little Athletics Queensland State Championships have been run and won after a huge weekend in Brisbane. Watch the full track and field REPLAYS of rising stars in action here.
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State records were smashed, medals won and rising stars put their names in lights after a big weekend of athletics in Brisbane.
The Little Athletics Queensland State Championships concluded on Sunday, with the final two days of action live streamed on KommunityTV.
Re-live all the brilliant performances in full track and field replays from the Queensland Sports and Athletics Centre.
And scroll down to read all about some of the best performances from the championships.
REPLAYS
DAY 3
WATCH THE DAY 3 TRACK ACTION IN THE VIDEO PLAYER ABOVE
FIELD REPLAY - DAY 3
DAY 2
TRACK REPLAY - DAY 2
FIELD REPLAY - DAY 2
Speed machine Roman Allan has caused a major sensation by becoming the first nine-year-old to break 10 seconds not once but twice in the boys U10 60m dash at Queensland Little Athletics State Championships.
The Springwood LAC sprinter broke 10 seconds in his heat with 9.97sec to become the first Queenslander to go under the magical mark in his age group.
He then bettered the mark again in the final with a time of 9.83sec.
The previous record stood at 10.09sec.
And spare a thought for runner-up Michael McKeown, who also bettered the previous mark with a time of 9.98sec.
Allan’s late highlight added to his stunning carnival where he also won the discus (31.8m) and long jump (4.62) in his age group.
Promising athlete Amelia Sherrard has claimed a state record while effortlessly clinching a middle distance double at the championships.
The Wynnum Manly Little Athletics runner streeted her rivals in the girls U16 800m as she led from gun to post in a flawless display.
Even having enough time to glance down at her watch mid race, Sherrard recorded a time of 2min15.06sec, bettering the previous mark of 2min15.72sec.
Such was her dominance that second-placed Elliza Moore-Kirkland was more than 10 seconds back.
Sherrard’s success franked her 400m title earlier in the meet.
Not to be outdone, Luke Gorski picked up the 800m crown in the same boys age group to sit alongside his 1500m victory.
Jumping from lane one, Mudgeeraba LAC’s Gorski was content to sit in second place before surging ahead 350m out and establishing an unassailable lead.
Pacesetter Harvey Hermiston finished second despite dropping to third at one stage before rallying again to pip Joshua Lehmann.
Earlier, gifted hurdler Harry Osborne smashed the state record on his way to winning the boys U14 300m final.
Representing Gold Coast LAC, Osborne stopped the clock at 39.44sec to claim a QBP (Queensland Best Performance) and take .34sec off the previous record.
The rising star is now a triple winner at state hurdles competition and his latest performance will hold him in good stead for the Australian championships in Adelaide next month.
Osborne jumped well and held a narrow lead through the first 200m before lifting his tempo when challenged by runner-up Kanay Miller at the turn.
It was there that Osborne produced his explosive finish to accelerate away for a convincing victory.
Gold Coast LAC continued its ascendancy on day three when Jonah Lucas produced another QBP in the boys U10 800m final to exact revenge on Patrick Reid from City North LAC.
Lucas made his move with 200m to go as he put paid to his nemesis by distancing him with a runaway victory in 2min20.30sec. The previous best mark was 2min20.55sec.
The victory was Lucas’s second gold of the meet, having claimed the boys U10 400m final in a QBP time of 1min01.64sec.
Harriet Osborne and Charlotte Wright produced the most thrilling finish of the day with little separating the two athletes as they hit the line in the girls U9 800m final.
Strathpine LAC’s Wright had set a blistering pace and held a significant lead entering the home straight before Osborne from Wynnum Manly Little Athletics, with the aid of an inside run, claimed victory in 2min39.83sec.
Only five hundredths of a second separated the pair.
Ellie Eckstein and Ayla Moon have shattered the state record by almost three seconds in the girls U12 800m.
Eckstein from Ashmore LAC registered 2min14.31sec, slicing a whopping 3.41sec off the previous mark, while North Mackay LAC’s Moon came home in 2min15.21sec, bettering the standing record of 2min72sec by 2.51sec.
Imogen Klass claimed the girls U16 long jump final with a winning leap of 4.85m.
Representing Strathpine LAC, Klass edged out Hayley Telford from Algester Little Athletics Centre on 4.81m and Aoife O’Carroll from Wynnum Manly Little Athletics on 4.80m.
The three podium finishers were well ahead of their rivals, with Gold Coast LAC’s Sahara Gower the nearest, 12cm adrift on 4.68m.
In the boys age group, Riley Collin beat his nearest rival by 22cm in a dominant display.
Collin from West Bundaberg LAC stretched his winning jump out to 6.02m.
The Gap LAC’s Lyndon Maynard finished with 5.80m, while Rogan Steyn from Redlands LAC competed the podium with 5.53m.
PREVIEW
The Queensland Little Athletics State Championships are the first taste of high level competition for many of our future Olympic stars.
And the next generation of athletes will be centre stage when the 2025 event is brought to you live and exclusive on KommunityTV from March 22-23.
National icon Sally Pearson OAM was one of many who first shone at the state level during her formative years and her success will be a recipe more than 2000 young athletes will hope to follow at the State Championships.
The Sunshine State’s best young talent will travel from every possible region before descending on the Queensland Sports and Athletics Centre.
“The event is a culmination of a huge season that started back in April last year,” Little Athletics Queensland chief executive officer Christopher Davis said.
“A record number of young boys and girls have enjoyed Little Athletics and for those who have made it to this event, it provides them the opportunity to put all their hard work to the test.”
For the second straight year, KommunityTV will capture every event on the track as well as select field events across two dedicated live streams on the Saturday and Sunday of the championships.
It will be broadcast across the Courier Mail and all of News Corp Australia’s regional Queensland mastheads.
With the 2032 Brisbane Olympics closing fast, these championships could be the first step, leap or vault for our young athletes on their journey to the top of the sport.
“It is the dream of so many children to represent Australia at a home Olympic or Paralympic Games in 2032, and for some that journey will begin, right here,” Davis said.
A number of QBPs (Queensland Best Performances) and ABPs (Australian Best Performances) are set to be broken across the weekend with athletes, aged as young as under-9s through to under-17s, competing in more than 176 events across the three days.
The championships will also add an extra layer for athletes between the ages of 13-15, who will compete for selection in the Queensland team that will travel to Adelaide in April to feature in the Australian Little Athletics Championships.
KommunityTV will also be there to live stream the ALAC from the SA Athletics Stadium.
Originally published as Live stream: Watch the Little Athletics Queensland State Championships 2025