Feature: As time goes by
Joseph Boo
With their free time, most kids ride around their neighborhoods on
skateboards or “shredders.” With Carlo Valdes, he’s usually in training.
Whether shooting a basketball, throwing a football, or going to the
batting cage, Carlo is often doing one of these activities. Whatever
month it is on the calendar, the odds are that the 10-year-old from Newport Beach is involved in some athletic competition.
“Sometimes, I just like being a kid,” he said. “But I also like to be
busy. And last year, I was busy.”
Baseball and track conflicted for Carlo last summer. Right after
baseball practice, Carlo would immediately go to practice with his track
club, Irvine Cougars. When fall and winter rolled around, the soon-to-be
fifth-grader at Mariners Christian Elementary School would have to juggle
football and basketball.
Not only is Carlo still juggling all these sports, but he’s doing it
well. He is the quarterback for the Junior All-American football team and
a pitcher on the Newport Beach Little League All-Star baseball squad. But
it is in track and field where he made the biggest noise.
On April 15, Carlo tied the then-United States Track and Field’s boys
bantam division record for the 100-meter dash with a 12.73 at a meet in
Chino. It has since been surpassed by .01 seconds.
His then-national record was the first of many accomplishments in a
stellar year where four other meet records fell by the wayside.
Carlo capped off the 2000 season with two titles at the USATF’s
National Youth Athletic Championships at Decatur, Ill. on July 9 where he
won national titles in the 100 and 200 runs.
Carlo is just one member of a fast family. His father, Arthur, ran
track and played football at Compton High, and he earned a football
scholarship to Michigan State. His mother, Wendy, ran track at Arcadia in
the same events Carlo competes in. And his sister, Vanessa, is planning
to go out for Corona del Mar’s track program as a freshman next year.
Carlo grew up playing baseball initially, but he started running
track, as well as organized football and basketball, three years ago.”One
of his teachers said he runs pretty fast, so we took him to an all-comers
track meet at Newport Harbor,” Arthur said. “He ended up breaking the
10-year-old age group record as an eight-year-old. We then took him to an
all-comers meet in Long Beach, and he was beating kids by 10- to 50
yards.”
Carlo’s performance the Newport Harbor Invitational in 1988 caught the
eye of race officials and coaches. He soon found himself under the
tutelage of Charles Lee and Ron Simon of the Irvine Cougars, and they
showed Carlo how to harness his speed effectively.
“My coaches were probably the biggest influence,” Carlo said. “They
drove me pretty hard.”
While he was pushed, Carlo was more than willing to put in the hard
work. Carlo would usually stretch out and warm up by the time his club
coaches arrived for practice.
He has applied his drives to other areas as well. His dad said that
Carlo would start homework the minute he comes home from school and
finish by 4:30 p.m. On most nights he shoots at the basket set up on his
driveway. And Carlo usually takes advantage of his vast backyard to throw
a football at various targets.
Although he has two national championships in track, football is his
favorite sport. In Carlo’s first year as the quarterback of the Junior
All-American team, he rushed for over 3,000 yards and 31 touchdowns,
according to his father. He excelled in football for the same reason he
did at track, his speed.
“Once he got past the line of scrimmage,” Arthur said. “He was just
gone. Nobody could catch him.”
Not surprisingly, the few free time Carlo has outside school and
sports is spent on competitive activities. Just on a more leisurely
level.
“I really like to golf and bowl,” he said. “And I like to play video
games.”
Despite his love of contests, it’s not the competition that brings
Carlo to all these sports. It’s the sport itself.
“I’m just trying my hardest,” Carlo said. “It doesn’t really matter if
I win or not, I just want to turn in one of my best efforts.”
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