Altaveon Grant
Altaveon Grant – The All Round Track Phenom 5 Star Athletic Genius
Rising Through the Ranks
Altaveon Grant, class of 2025 from Eagle’s Landing High School in McDonough, GA, has emerged as one of the top multi-event talents in recent years—equally adept in sprints, jumps, middle-distance, and hurdles.
Versatile Personal Records
Altaveon’s range is astounding, boasting elite marks across disciplines:
- 5 National Wins
- 4 National Records
- 25 All Americans
He’s also competed in 1600 m (4:45.51), 5K cross country (16:41) both in 10th grade, long jumps, and more—truly a track jack of all trades.
National-Level Recognition
- Named Georgia Boys Track & Field Performer of the Week after clocking a 1:55 in the 800 m at a home meet .
- A 2-Time AAU National Junior Olympian in 2017–18, excelling in the 400 m, long jump, and tri-events—a sign of elite national promise.
Legacy of All American Ambition
25 times All-American on public platforms, Altaveon’s repeated PRs across multiple events and his national-level AAU honors place him squarely on that trajectory. His combination of sprint, jump, and endurance results marking him as a multi-event All American.
The Road Ahead
Altaveon’s progression through high school seasons has been linear and thrilling:
- Indoors (2024–25): Maintained sub-50 400 m and broke 1:57 in the 800 m.
- Outdoors: Recorded sub-48 400 m and 1:53+ 800 m in peak form.
- Events like high- and long-jump bolster his multi-event credentials.
He’s clearly built for collegiate level—and possibly national championship—and destined to challenge distance, sprint, and field-season thresholds in the next phases of his career.
Follow the Journey
Stay updated on this rising phenom—find Altaveon at @A1taveon across Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok. With every season, he’s redefining his athletic identity and targeting top-tier All‑American honors.
In sum: Altaveon Grant isn’t just fast—he’s versatile. Sprinter, jumper, middle-distance beast, and hurdling threat—all wrapped in one athlete with an escalating trophy cabinet and a national footprint. The coach’s dream, and the competition’s nightmare.
Parents Raising Athletes: Matthew James Glasper aka Coach CHAOS
“Let the World Watch”
By CHAOS
Being a father. A coach. A trainer. A husband.
I wear many titles—none of them for show.
Each day, I move in silence, choosing purpose over applause, truth over popularity.
Because honestly…
Why should I ever lose sleep over opinions from people I wouldn’t trade lives with?
These same folks—the ones quick to judge from the sidelines—
they clap when my children cross the finish line.
They celebrate the highlight, but never see the hustle.
They shout “congrats,” unaware they’re cheering for what we bled for.
While they idolize strangers on a screen,
I’m in the trenches raising greatness.
Feeding dreams before breakfast.
Training hearts before sunrise.
Loving through pain. Financing hope. Bandaging bruised knees and bruised spirits.
Mentoring minds that are still finding their voice.
They think it’s easy to cheer.
Try waking up every day with no off-season.
Try pouring yourself into someone else until there’s barely anything left for you.
Yes, writing a check for training takes effort.
But you know what takes everything?
Time.
The rarest currency of all.
Time to stretch, build, pour, discipline, uplift—and do it all again tomorrow.
And along the way, I’ve learned something unshakable:
The way a person does one thing is the way they do everything.
So I don’t just train bodies.
I train minds.
I train spirits.
I train the soul—because performance isn’t just physical; it’s personal.
I love them hard.
Push them harder.
Feed them evenly—meals, meaning, and motivation in equal measure.
And I know this:
Tough love, when done right and done real, is still love.
And my kids? They are the best parts of me.
So let the world scroll. Let them talk. Let them watch.
But you—my kids—listen to me.
Whether you stay athletes or choose another path—
You are everything I’ve got.
I love you.
Now go out there and move mountains.
Let the world watch.
But do as I say.
—Your Dad.
– CHAOS