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Kishane Thompson becomes sixth-fastest men's 100m sprinter ever with personal best in Jamaican trials
Kishane Thompson becomes sixth-fastest men's 100m sprinter ever with personal best in Jamaican trials

The Hindu

time28-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Hindu

Kishane Thompson becomes sixth-fastest men's 100m sprinter ever with personal best in Jamaican trials

In the men's 100m final, at the Jamaican national athletics trials, Paris Olympics silver medallist Kishane Thompson won gold with a blistering 9.75s timing, a personal best, making him the sixth-fastest 100m sprinter in history. Only Justin Gatlin (9.74), Asafa Powell (9.72), Yohan Blake (9.69), Tyson Gay (9.69) and world record-holder Bolt (9.58) have recorded a better timing in the event than Thompson. Men's 100m all-time top 10 Usain Bolt (Jamaica) – 9.58 Tyson Gay (USA) – 9.69 Yohan Blake (Jamaica) – 9.69 Asafa Powell (Jamaica) – 9.72 Justin Gatlin (USA) – 9.74 Kishane Thompson (Jamaica) - 9.75 Christian Coleman (USA) – 9.76 Trayvon Bromell (USA) – 9.76 Fred Kerley (USA) – 9.76 Ferdinand Omanyala (Kenya) – 9.77 The 23-year-old, who was beaten by just 0.005sec by Noah Lyles in the 100m final at the 2024 Paris Olympics, sliced two hundredths off his previous career best of 9.77s set in June of 2024 to mark the best men's 100m timing for the 2025 season. This was Thompson's second consecutive national title in the 100m sprint. Oblique Seville shrugged off concern over a tight hamstring to finish second in 9.83 and Ackeem Blake was third in a personal best of 9.88. With inputs from AFP

Olympic champion Noah Lyles to race 100m at London Diamond League
Olympic champion Noah Lyles to race 100m at London Diamond League

New York Times

time23-05-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Olympic champion Noah Lyles to race 100m at London Diamond League

Olympic champion Noah Lyles will race the 100m at the London Diamond League in July. Lyles has not raced over that distance since the Olympic final last August, a title he won by one five-thousandths of a second from Jamaica's Kishane Thompson. It was the closest men's 100m Olympic final ever and Lyles' 9.78sec winning time was the fastest since Usain Bolt's Olympic record (9.63) in London in 2012. It made him the first US man to win 100m Olympic gold for 20 years, since Justin Gatlin in 2004. Advertisement 'My road to defending my world titles in Tokyo in September goes through London,' Lyles said. 'Ive had great experiences there the last two years, running some of my fastest times, and I look forward to another in July.' Last summer he won the 100m in London in what was his only appearance at a Diamond League meeting all year — it is the biggest of the meets on the circuit — and final race before the Paris Olympics. Lyles' 9.81 was not only a PB but meant his winning margin was five-tenths of a second too, clear daylight by sprinting standards. In 2023, he beat Botswana's Letsile Tebogo in London to win the 200m in a then world-leading time of 19.47. It extended his run of consecutive 200m wins to 17 (he jokingly calls this distance his 'wife' and the 100m his 'mistress') and he won his third 200m world title that September (19.52) by over two-tenths from American youngster Erriyon Knighton. In fact, Lyles' 200m streak ended up lasting 26 races across three years between the delayed 2021 Tokyo Olympics and 2024 Paris Games — he took bronze in the final in both. It has been a quiet start to the year for Lyles on the circuit, with him one of the big-hitters missing from Michael Johnson's Grand Slam Track League. He competed at only two indoor meets, both times only running the 60m. The 27-year-old did not go to the US indoor Championships to defend his 60m title, nor the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, China, having won 60m silver in Glasgow the year prior. Instead, Lyles opted to race longer, and in April ran his first 400m as a professional athlete. A 'tight ankle' forced him to withdraw from the Atlanta City Games last week, with Lyles content to 'play it safe' because he has wildcards (automatic entries) into the 100m and 200m at the Tokyo World Championships in September after winning both titles in Budapest, Hungary, two summers ago. He is trying to become the first man since Usain Bolt in 2013 and 2015 to win the 100/200 double at consecutive World Championships — Gatlin in 2005 and Tyson Gay in 2007 were the last Americans to manage that. ()

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