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Olympics: Noah Lyles wins men’s 100m final
7 hours ago7 hours ago
Lyles won the men’s 100m final in 9.79 seconds to claim gold at Paris 2024. It was one of the most competitive finals of all time, with the American winning the race in a photo finish over Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson.
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Noah Lyles of United States celebrates after winning gold
Lyles celebrated wildly when it became clear that he got goldImage: Phil Noble/REUTERS
Noah Lyles of the United States claimed the gold in the Olympic 100m final in Paris on Sunday.
Kishane Thompson of Jamaica took silver and another American, Fred Kerley sealed bronze.
Lyles is the first American to win the event since Justin Gatlin won in the 2004 Athens Games.
Noah Lyles of United States rings the bell as he celebrates after winning gold at Paris 2024Noah Lyles of United States rings the bell as he celebrates after winning gold at Paris 2024
Lyles is now targeting an Olympic double with victory in the 200m next weekImage: Kai Pfaffenbach/REUTERS
He started slow but accelerated through the finish to beat Thompson by five-thousandths of a second with a new personal best time of 9.79 seconds.
“It’s the one I wanted, it’s the hard battle, it’s the amazing opponents,” he said.
Closest Olympic 100m finish in modern history
His victory was only confirmed after a photo-finish, with his fellow American Kerley claiming bronze in 9.81.
That was a thousandth of a second faster than Akani Simbini of South Africa who ended fourth, setting a new national record of 9.82 seconds.
Defending champion Lamont Marcell Jacobs of Italy, heavily strapped due to injury, finished fifth in 9.85 and, such was the quality of the race, that eighth-placed Oblique Seville of Jamaica clocked 9.91 seconds, meaning all eight finalists were separated by just 0.12 of a second.
Noah Lyles of United States crosses the line to win gold ahead of silver medallist Kishane Thompson of Jamaica and bronze medallist Fred Kerley of United StatesNoah Lyles of United States crosses the line to win gold ahead of silver medallist Kishane Thompson of Jamaica and bronze medallist Fred Kerley of United States
The stadium scoreboard initially flashing a photo finish for the first seven athletes.Image: Fabrizio Bensch/REUTERS
“Everybody came prepared for the fight and I wanted to prove that I’m the man among all of them, I’m the wolf among wolves,” Lyles said.
It was the first time eight men have broken 10 seconds in a wind-legal 100 meters race.
lo/msh (AFP, dpa, Reuters)