Lyles wins last 100m before Olympics in personal best
LONDON: Noah Lyles set himself up perfectly for the Paris Olympics by haring to a personal best in winning the 100m at Saturday´s Diamond League meeting.
In the last sprint before the Olympics, Lyles was relatively quick out of his blocks and tore down the track at London Stadium to win in 9.81 seconds.
Importantly, he easily held off a clutch of rivals he would expect to come knocking in Paris and now looks like the sprinter to beat in the French capital, with the opening ceremony just six days away.
“That was fun,” said Lyles. “I could have had a better start. The transitions were great and coming away with a personal best.
“I wanted a faster time but I had the wind. After building my confidence and getting through 2021, this has been what I prayed for and what I wanted.”
Turning to the Paris Olympics, Lyles added: “I´m going to win, it´s what I always do. I´m getting faster every week.
“A personal best and getting faster before Paris. I wanted to dip under the 9.80 -- I thought I was going to get a wind like everyone else.
“I know exactly where I am ahead of Paris. I knew we´d be getting more eyes on us, I´ve been waiting for this for six years!”
Lyles, one of the stars of a recently-released Netflix docu-series called “Sprint”, insisted that he would not be over-awed by public attention.
“I live for the biggest moments, the more eyes the better I perform,” he said.
“As soon as I get on the stage when the TV is on and people are watching, I perform.”
Once the American, who won the 100-200m golds at the Budapest world championships last year, got going, there was no doubt he would win.
South African Akani Simbine timed a season´s best of 9.85sec in second, while Botswana´s Letsile Tebogo rounded out the podium in 9.88sec to match his own national record.
British champion Louie Hinchliffe, the winner of this season´s NCAA championships, was fourth in 9.97sec, while Zharnel Hughes had to be content with sixth (10.00) behind Jamaica´s Ackeem Blake (9.97).
“It´s OK. I´m not happy with the result but it´s not bad, it wasn´t my worst run,” Hinchliffe, coached by US track and field legend Carl Lewis, told BBC.
“I can work on the start, I looked well out of it. Maybe some nerves, it´s my first time here. Some way to go. “My coach will watch today´s race back with me and we will learn a few things I am sure.”
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