Texas Teen Sentenced to 35 Years for F*tal Track Meet St*bbing That Sh-ocked the Nation

Karmelo Anthony

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A Texas teenager has been sentenced to 35 years in prison after a jury convicted him of murder in the fatal stabbing of a fellow high school athlete during a track meet, bringing a closely watched case to a dramatic conclusion more than a year after the tragedy unfolded.

The case centered on a confrontation between 19-year-old Karmelo Anthony and 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a high school track competition in Frisco, Texas, in April 2025.

After less than three hours of deliberation, jurors rejected Anthony’s claim of self-defense and found him guilty of murder. On Tuesday, they sentenced him to 35 years behind bars.

A Dispute Under a Team Tent Turns Deadly

Austin Metcalf

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According to testimony presented during the trial, several schools were competing at a track meet when Anthony sat beneath a tent designated for students from Memorial High School.

Witnesses testified that Metcalf and other students repeatedly asked Anthony to leave the area because it belonged to their team.

What began as a verbal disagreement quickly escalated.

Court testimony indicated that Anthony allegedly warned others not to touch him and at one point referenced something inside his backpack. Witnesses said tensions continued to rise before Metcalf pushed Anthony.

Moments later, Anthony pulled out a knife and stabbed Metcalf in the chest.

Emergency responders rushed to help the injured teenager, but he later died from his injuries.

The two students reportedly did not know each other before that day.

Self-Defense Argument Rejected

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Anthony’s defense team argued throughout the trial that he acted in self-defense during a rapidly escalating confrontation.

Defense attorney Mike Howard told jurors that Texas law does not require someone to wait until they have been seriously injured before defending themselves.

He urged jurors to consider the situation from Anthony’s perspective in what he described as a split-second moment of chaos.

Prosecutors, however, painted a very different picture.

Lead prosecutor Bill Wirskye argued that Anthony provoked the confrontation and responded with excessive force.

“You don’t get to meet a shove with a stab,” prosecutors told jurors during closing arguments.

The jury ultimately agreed with the prosecution’s interpretation of events, choosing a murder conviction rather than the lesser charge of manslaughter.

Emotional Words from Austin’s Father

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One of the most emotional moments came after sentencing when Austin Metcalf’s father addressed Anthony directly.

Speaking in court, Jeff Metcalf expressed his grief and frustration over the loss of his son.

“You failed your parents, you failed yourself and you failed society,” he said after the sentence was announced.

Throughout the case, Metcalf’s family repeatedly urged the public not to turn the tragedy into a racial issue.

The case attracted widespread attention online because Anthony is Black and Metcalf was white. However, attorneys for both sides consistently maintained that race played no role in the confrontation.

Even after the verdict, Austin’s father reiterated that the case was about accountability rather than race.

A Community Forever Changed

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The trial drew intense public interest, with long lines forming outside the courthouse each day.

Supporters of both families attended proceedings, while dozens gathered outside awaiting the verdict.

The tragedy has left a lasting impact on the rapidly growing city of Frisco, where both teenagers were described as promising students with plans for college and bright futures ahead of them.

For Austin Metcalf’s family, the sentence closes one chapter of a devastating loss. For Karmelo Anthony, the 35-year prison term marks the beginning of a dramatically different future.

The case serves as a stark reminder of how quickly a brief confrontation can escalate into a life-altering tragedy for everyone involved.

References

Associated Press (June 10, 2026)
Collin County Court proceedings
Trial testimony and sentencing hearing coverage
Public statements from attorneys and family members involved in the case