Ja’Kobe Tharp (born 30 September 2005) is an American athlete specializing in the high hurdles. As of 2026[update], he holds the current world record in 110 metres hurdles, with a time of 12.75 seconds set at the 2026 NCAA Outdoor Championships. He won gold medals in 110 m hurdles at the 2025 American Championships and the 2024 World U20 Championships. He was a finalist at the 2025 World Championships and won the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships. In the indoor 60 metres hurdles, he holds the third fastest time, and the fastest for a college athlete, with a time of 7.32 seconds set at the 2026 NCAA Indoor Championships.[1]
Early and personal life
Ja'Kobe was initially raised in Fulton, Kentucky. He later moved and attended Rockvale High School in Tennessee.[2] Both his parents were basketball players; his father, Jimmie Ware, was a high school player and his mother, Aminda, played for Tennessee–Martin and Dyersburg State CC.[3]
Career
2024: World U20 champion
He finished runner-up at the NCAA Championships in June 2024, running for Auburn University. He finished the NCAA season with a 13.18 seconds personal best.[4] He achieved that in winning the Southeastern Conference in Gainesville, Florida. This time set a new national U20 record breaking the previous mark set by Renaldo Nehemiah in 1978.[5] Later that month, he won the 110m hurdle final at the USATF U20 Championships in Eugene, Oregon.[6]
He competed at the 2024 World Athletics U20 Championships in Lima, Peru, qualifying for the final with a year world U20 leading time of 13.11 seconds.[7] He won the gold medal in the final with a 13.05 seconds (-0.5m/s) lifetime best time, and a national U20 record over the 99cm hurdles, as well as a 2024 world U20 leading time.[8][9]
2025: American champion
Tharp ran 7.45 seconds to win the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships in Virginia Beach on 15 March 2025.[10] He ran 13.15 seconds for the 110m hurdles to finish second at the 2025 SEC Championships, a time which moved him to fifth on the NCAA all-time list.[11] In June 2025, he also won the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships 110 metres hurdles title in Eugene, Oregon, in a personal best time of 13.05 seconds.[12][13] He ran 13.17 seconds to place third at the 2025 Herculis event in Monaco on his Diamond League debut on 11 July 2025.[14]
On 3 August 2025, he ran a personal best 13.01 seconds to win the 2025 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon ahead of Cordell Tinch.[15] He was a finalist competing at the 2025 World Athletics Championships in the men's 110 metres hurdles in Tokyo, Japan, in September 2025, placing sixth overall.[16][17] In December he was one of three finalist for the 2025 Bowerman Award, ultimately won by Jordan Anthony.[18]
2026: World record holder
In February 2026, he won the 60 metres hurdles in 7.48 seconds at the SEC Indoor Championships, winning by 0.02 seconds from Ja'Qualon Scott.[19] Tharp ran a personal best of 7.36 to win his preliminary 60m hurdles heat on 13 March at the 2026 NCAA Indoor Championships. The time was the second fastest in NCAA history and just .01 seconds behind the NCAA record of Grant Holloway, and the fourth fastest in world history.[20] The following day, Tharp won the final in 7.32 seconds to break Holloway‘s 7.35 collegiate record, and move to second on the American all-time list and third worldwide behind Holloway and Colin Jackson.[21][22] In May, Tharp ran 13.05 to win the 110 m hurdles at both the SEC Championships and NCAA East Regionals and qualified for the 2026 NCAA Outdoor Championships.[23][24][25]
In the preliminary heats of the NCAA championship in Hayward Field, Eugene, he broke the world record with a time of 12.75 seconds (with a tail wind of 1.0 m/s[note 1]),[26] which is pending ratification. This broke the previous record of 12.80 seconds, set by compatriot Aries Merritt in 2012. It was the first world record set at the NCAA Championships since Dwight Stones in the high jump in 1976, and was run on the same track (Hayward Field) as the women’s world record, set by Tobi Amusan in 2022.[26] Tharp expressed surprise at breaking the record, stating "It wasn't on my bingo chart for this meet, not at all. I'm speechless, seriously."[27] On 12 June, Tharp returned to win the final with 12.90 seconds into a head-wind, winning ahead of Kendrick Smallwood, who ran 12.95 seconds.[28]
Note
^The limit to qualify for a world record is 2.0 m/s.