You’ve got too much time on your hands! Spend some of that time on smart training and get as fit and fast as possible and let the times take care of themselves.
Problems with such an analysis:
1: Young athletes generally improve so rapidly through training that it makes comparisons between their times indoors and outdoors irrelevant.
2: Improvement in top speed will affect 55 or 60 times more for beginners than older athletes as they reach their relative top speed so much sooner.
3: concentration on only one aspect of training when there are so many with room for improvement is self-limiting.
So would it be safe to assume if i worked and improved i could be running a 10.9 at states?
It’s not “safe to assume” anything. Do your work and improve and see what happens. The better you prepare, the better you’ll do relative to your capacity, age, growth pattern through the year, etc.
is it safe to assume it’d not safe to assume anything?nah just messin witcha thanks for the help and i’ma do big things this year