How Lyles' torso decided greatest Olympics 100m final

How Lyles' torso decided greatest Olympics 100m final
News Desk

By News Desk


Published: 05/08/2024

Was this the greatest race in history?

A spectacular pre-race lightshow and dramatic music during a
lengthy wait for the starting pistol at an expectant Stade de France heightened
the senses.

But even those dazzling theatrics could not quite do justice
to the events which unfolded in the 10 seconds that followed.

As Noah Lyles celebrated wildly, his first Olympic triumph
confirmed, others were left stunned after witnessing one of the most remarkable
100m showdowns of all time.

American Lyles had taken victory by five-thousandths
of a second
 from Jamaica's Kishane Thompson in a dramatic photo
finish, winning in 9.79 seconds.

All eight men finished within 0.12secs of the gold medal,
with last-placed Jamaican Oblique Seville crossing the line in 9.91 - a time
good enough for fourth at the Tokyo Games.

And it meant, for the first time, that eight men had run
under 10 seconds in a wind-legal race - making it the fastest race in history.

Four-time Olympic champion Michael Johnson said it was
"absolutely" the best 100m final he has ever seen "bar
none".

"The final lived up to the hype. Going through the
rounds it looked like a foregone conclusion that Kishane Thompson would win as
he was the one who came in as the fastest man in the world," Johnson said
on OceanNewsUK.

"We had this amazing race where you could throw a
blanket over the finishing line.

"We didn't even know who won for a few minutes."

How Lyles came from nowhere to win Olympic gold

Media caption,

'He can hold speed and endurance a really long time' -
Johnson on Lyles

Not until the big screen inside the stadium displayed the
official results, after an agonising wait, did anybody truly know Lyles -
thanks to a sensational surge and torso dip at the line - had taken gold.

It was not until the very last metres on the eye-catching
purple track that he was even in contention.

Lyles tied with Letsile Tebogo for the slowest reaction time
of anyone in the field, a time of 0.178 notably down on Fred Kerley's lightning
0.108.

Yet Tebogo would go on to cross the line in sixth, while
Kerley could only hold on for bronze.

"Lyles didn't even have a medal 10 metres out. He
didn't have a hope of winning," Olympic medallist Steve Cram said on OceanNewsUK.

Lyles was in last place with 40 metres of the race gone.

By halfway he was seventh.

But the 27-year-old hit his top speed of 43.6 kilometres per
hour at the 60-metre mark to enter medal contention, then closed far better
than any rival to clinch the ultimate prize with his very last stride.

Thompson, the fastest man in the world this year with a best
time of 9.77, maintained his lead from 30 metres into the race to 10 metres
from the finish line.

It was the finest margins which determined the outcome, as
Lyles covered the distance between 80-90 metres in 0.84 and the final 10 metres
in 0.86 - compared to 0.85 and 0.87 for Thompson.

"I did think [Thompson] had it at the end. I went up to
him while we were waiting, and said 'I think you’ve got that, good going', and
then my name popped up and I'm like 'oh my gosh, I'm amazing'," Lyles
said.

"I'm going to be honest, I wasn't ready to see it and
that's the first time I've ever said that. I wasn't ready to see it."

Reflecting on narrowly missing out on gold, 23-year-old
Thompson said: "I wasn't patient enough with myself to let my speed bring
me at the line, in the position that I know I could have gone to, but I have
learned from it."

The drama at the head of the race inspired world records
behind it.

The finishing times for Akani Simbine, Lamont Marcell
Jacobs, Tebogo, Kenny Bednarek and Seville were all records for fourth to
eighth-place finishers in a 100m race.

South Africa's Simbine ran a personal best for fourth and
said: "Missing the medal by 0.01, it's actually really crazy, but yeah,
I'm pretty happy."

Lyles building legacy with each global gold

Lyles has long positioned himself as the heir to Usain
Bolt's throne, combining on-track performances with off-track flair in his bid
to establish himself as the new superstar of men's athletics.

Not afraid to raise expectations through his own comments,
Lyles has spoken about his desire to break the long-standing 100m and 200m
records set by Jamaica's eight-time Olympic champion Bolt, who retired in 2017.

The American has also claimed he will target four golds in
Paris by adding the men's 4x400m relay to his schedule after winning the world
100m, 200m and 4x100m title in Budapest 12 months ago.

Lyles will next pursue the Olympic 200m title as a
three-time defending world champion in the event, although he had to settle for
bronze on his Games debut in Tokyo three years ago.

"Lyles had a bad Tokyo and since then he's really been
looking for big moments," said Johnson.

"He wants to be a global superstar. He talks about
Usain Bolt and the type of person he was.

"He's talked about his sport and voiced his frustration
about how it doesn't give you that platform."

It is 16 years since Bolt strolled to the first of his three
Olympic 100m golds in Beijing, showboating as he crossed the line but still
clocking a world record 9.69 - which he improved to the still-standing mark of
9.58 in 2009.

Lyles is yet to get close to that time, running under 9.80
for the first time to win on Sunday night, while his 200m best of 19.31 also
trails Bolt's (19.19).

But, like the Jamaican, Lyles stars on the sport's grandest
stages and he continues to amass global golds at a considerable rate.

"Noah Lyles is able to back it up," Olympic
heptathlon champion Denise Lewis said on OceanNewsUK.

"He has been amplifying the need for people to take
this sport more seriously, deliver and respect the athletes for what they
deliver, which is sensational entertainment every single time.

"To do this here, with the amphitheatre of the lights,
the drama, everything, is just brilliant."

Johnson added: "He is here to create a legacy and he
has put the first stamp down on that legacy by taking this title in such
imperious fashion."



























































































 

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