Olympia 2024 | Noah Lyles wins memorable 100-meter final

Noah Lyles jumped up and down like crazy, he roared out his joy and relief – then he ripped his race number with his name on it from his chest and held it up to all the cameras. “Look, I showed everyone,” that was probably what he meant. And indeed: Lyles put on a spectacular sprint show in the Stade de France, grabbing the coveted gold in a thousandth of a second decision thanks to a strong final sprint.

Mission accomplished: With his dream run, Lyles fulfilled his promise and brought Olympic gold in the 100 m back to the USA after 20 years.

The world champion ran a personal best of 9.79 seconds in the spectacular final in Paris and was unstoppable. Behind Lyles, Kishane Thompson (9.79/Jamaica) secured silver, while Fred Kerley (9.81) took bronze in the Stade de France.

Lyles had put himself under maximum pressure beforehand, believing that only he, the three-time world champion from Budapest, could take home gold on the most prestigious of all courses. “The more eyes are on me, the better I am,” said the 27-year-old – and then he actually kept his word.

Finally the breakthrough at the Olympics

With his irresistible gold run and fingernails painted in the US colors, Lyles also reconciled his homeland, after all the USA had to wait since 2004 for an Olympic champion in the 100 m. At that time in Athens, Justin Gatlin triumphed, then the era of the Jamaican Usain Bolt began, in Tokyo surprise winner Marcell Jacobs (Italy) duped the US boys.

Now Lyles delivered what the fans wanted to see – and celebrated his first gold medal at the Olympic Games.

This meant that Lyles also made his personal peace with the Olympics. At the pandemic games in Tokyo, he suffered from the sterile atmosphere, he missed the fans, and his depression, which had plagued him since his youth, broke out again. In the 200 m, he only managed to win bronze. “That’s not enough,” Lyles swore to himself afterwards. Now, the impressive redemption.

A gold medal is not enough for Lyles

In Paris, Lyles is aiming for three more gold medals, in the 200 m and in the 4×100 and 4×400 m relays. His goal? To become a legend, to close the gap left by Usain Bolt. And Lyles could actually do it, the man from Florida has everything: charisma, charm, a desire to put on a show, snappy sayings – and a moving story.

In high school, Lyles was often teased; he had a learning disability; his parents divorced early; his mother Keisha raised him and his brother, who was also a sprinter, alone; there was not always enough food or money. “One time, our electricity was cut off,” said Lyles. Added to this was his depression.

But Lyles persevered, and World Federation President Sebastian Coe calls him an “absolute rock star.” And now Lyles is finally an Olympic champion.

Source: www.sport.de