Lyles Wins the 100m in 9.83 seconds

Lyles Wins the 100m in 9.83 seconds

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Overcome Asthma and ADHD to the Path of Bolts... Lyles Wins the 100m in 9.83 seconds


Challenge to win simultaneous 100m and 200m world championships


Noah Lyles (26, USA) recently wrote on social network service (SNS), "I will run 9.65 19.10, 9.65, 19.10".


It means that he will challenge 100m 9.65 seconds and 200m 19.10.


Lyles' ambitious message, which reminded him of the retired 'Athletics Emperor' Usain Bolt (37, Jamaica), stirred up the world athletics world. 카지노사이트


And Lyles won his first personal world championship in the 100 m.


In the 200 m, he is aiming for a third consecutive championship.


Lyles took first place in the men's 100m final at the 2023 Budapest World Athletics Championships held at the National Stadium in Budapest, Hungary on the 21st (Korean time) with a time of 9.83 seconds.


He achieved two consecutive 200m victories in Doha in 2019 and Eugene in 2022, solidifying his position as the "200m strongest", but was not considered a favorite for the 100m championship.


Lyles also took the last train in the U.S. national championships with a time of 10 seconds and 00, third place.


However, no player ran faster than Lyles in the World Championships final.


Lechile Tebogo (20, Botswana), who holds the world record under the age of 20 (9 seconds 91), took second place, and Janelle Hughes (28, England) came in third.


Tebogo, Hughes, and Oblique Seville (22, Jamaica) crossed the finish line almost simultaneously in 9.88 seconds.


The rankings were divided in records measured up to one thousandth of a second.


Tebogo recorded 9.873 seconds, Hughes recorded 9.874 seconds, and Seville ranked 2nd to 4th with 9.877 seconds.


Sani Brown Abdul Hakimu (24), a Japanese sprinter with a Ghanaian father and a Japanese mother, became the first Asian athlete to reach the men's 100m final at the World Championships for the second consecutive time and placed 6th with a time of 10.04, one step higher than last year's 7th place. occupied


2022 Eugene World Championship champion Fred Curley (28, USA) and Tokyo Olympics gold medalist Lamont Marcel Jacobs (28, Italy) were eliminated in the semifinals.


Although he failed to achieve his life goal of 100m 9.65 in Budapest this time, Lyles got the opportunity to challenge 'the first men's 100m, 200m and 400m relay triple crown since Bolt'.


In an interview with the World Association of Athletics Federations, Associated Press, and Reuters after the game, Lyles revealed the reason for revealing his ambitious goal on social media, saying, "A new story is needed in athletics." People laughed at me


, but I was confident, and I did it in the end,” he proudly said.


He continued, "World Athletics will remember 2023 as 'the year Lyles won the 100m, 200m and 400m relay at the World Championships'", declaring his challenge for three gold medals.


Bolt, who holds world records in the men's 100m 9.58 and 200m 19.19, won three gold medals (100m, 200m, 400m relay) in Berlin in 2009, Moscow in 2013 and Beijing in 2015.


At the 2011 Daegu Games, she was disqualified for a false start in the 100m, and only won gold medals in the 200m and 400m relay.


Since Bolt, no athlete has won the men's 100m and 200m world championships.


"I want to be an athlete who brings a lot of stories to athletics," said Lyles.


Watch how I play,” he said, “watching the rest of my game, there may be people who say, ‘That is the start of a dynasty’.”


In fact, Lyles has already told many stories beyond athletics and into sports.


OTT Netflix is ​​also producing a documentary about Lyles' life.


During his childhood, Lyles spent more time in the hospital than on the track.


He suffered from asthma as a child, and in high school he was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and dyslexia.


It was his mother, Keisha, who guided Lyles, who was staying in the 'small world', out of the hospital.


"I remember going to the hospital when I was four years old because I couldn't breathe.


My childhood memories are mainly hospitals," said Lyles.


I used to do it,” he recalled.


After Keisha divorced her husband, she raised the Lyles brothers alone.


Lyles recalled, "I remember that the electricity was cut off at home."


She added, "My dream is to be a rapper, not a painter.


Because it's easier to rap rather than draw to talk about my mother."


Lyles' struggle was not over.


He doesn't mind revealing his combat weapon.


"I don't feel accomplished when I'm depressed," says Lyles. 


"There are still people who are resistant to psychiatric treatment.


I tell them, 'Those who are sick are not villains.


Efforts to cure their illness are good. It's work.


' It's also following my mother's teaching, 'Say you're sick when you're sick.'"


In Budapest, Lyles felt a sense of accomplishment when he won the 100m.


Reuters reported, "Recently, whenever he wins, Lyles says, 'Mom, I'm the world champion.'


Lyles, who insisted that "the ceremony should be done like a child.


That way, the viewers will enjoy it too", recalled the cartoon Dragon Ball that he enjoyed watching as a child, and held a 'Pongpung Ceremony'.

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