Okay, so today I’m gonna talk about something I messed around with this past weekend – figuring out some stuff about Brock Lesnar and his daughter. Yeah, sounds random, right? Let me walk you through it.

First off, I got curious. I was watching some old wrestling clips, you know, Brock smashing people, and I thought, “I wonder what his kids are up to?” I started with the obvious stuff – Google. Just typed in “Brock Lesnar daughter” and boom, there’s Mya Lesnar.
Then I saw she was doing track and field. That’s when I went down the rabbit hole. I started digging for her stats, her school, all that stuff. You can find some of it pretty easily. I managed to find some of her official track and field records. Nothing too crazy, just basic results and stuff. I wanted to see how she’s progressing, her personal bests, you get the idea.
Next, I jumped over to social media. I know, I know, a bit stalkerish, but it’s all public info, alright? I looked for any official pages, school athletics pages, anything that might give me a glimpse into her training or recent performances. Some stuff was locked down, some was public. Scraped what I could. I wasn’t looking for any personal dirt, just athletic achievements.
After that, I started cross-referencing information. I had track times from one site, school info from another, and social media snippets from a third. I pieced it all together to get a rough picture of her athletic journey. Is she improving year over year? What are her strengths and weaknesses based on event results? You know, the kind of stuff a sports nerd like me would do.
Here’s the thing: I wasn’t trying to build some crazy dossier. It was more of an exercise in information gathering. Seeing how much you can find out about someone just from publicly available sources. Scary, but also kinda fascinating.

I learned a few things:
- It’s surprisingly easy to find information online, even without being some kind of super hacker.
- Context matters. Raw data is useless without understanding the sport and what the numbers mean.
- Privacy is a myth. Assume everything you put online is accessible to someone.
So yeah, that’s my weekend project. Brock Lesnar’s daughter and the power of open-source intelligence. A bit weird, maybe, but I found it interesting. And hey, maybe she’ll be an Olympian someday. Who knows?