American Lyles Delivers With 100m World Gold
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Noah Lyles has been talking up his 100 meters chances in the World Athletics Championships all week and the American 200 meters specialist backed up the chat where and when it mattered on Sunday as he took gold in a personal best 9.83 seconds.
It was a blanket finish behind him as Letsile Tebogo of Botswana took silver by one thousandth of a second from Briton Zharnel Hughes. Fourth-placed Oblique Seville of Jamaica was three thousandths of a second off the podium as all three men clocked 9.88.
Former champion Christian Coleman was also in the mix after a great start but was just overhauled to finish fifth in 9.92.
Tebogo, 20, is the first African to win a world 100m medal, while Hughes, the fastest in the world coming into the championships with 9.83, is the first Briton on the men’s 100m podium since Darren Campbell took bronze 20 years ago.
It is the United States though who are firmly top of the sprinting tree again as Lyles’ victory makes if four world titles in a row, following four in a row for Jamaica before that.
It had been billed as a wide open final and at 50 meters most of the field were locked together in a line.
Lyles, though forged his way to the front in the last 30 meters, just, and the event’s biggest showman had to delay his celebration until the big screen confirmed his triumph. He had predicted he would run 9.65 but a personal best of 9.83 proved enough.
The two-times world champion in the 200m will now go for the sprint double, last achieved by Usain Bolt in 2015, before hoping to sign off with a win in the sprint relay.
Hughes, who was disqualified for a false start in the Tokyo Olympics final, was delighted with his medal to cap a season where he has captured the British 100 and 200m records that had both stood for 30 years.
Defending 100m world champion Fred Kerley of the U.S. failed to qualify for the final after running 10.02 in the semis.