Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted August 3, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted August 3, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Olympic Men’s 100: Is It Still a Can’t Miss Moment? Noah Lyles, the brash ********* with dreams of Olympic gold in Paris, rarely cedes the spotlight. He is, after all, the biggest star in what historically has been track and field’s most high-profile event, the men’s 100-meter dash. But ahead of This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , he is also enough of a realist to acknowledge that the race no longer has the cachet it once did. It might not even be the premier event in the sport anymore. Even Lyles, who doubled as the 100- and 200-meter champion at last year’s world championships, conceded as much at a meet in London a few weeks ago. “I think the 400 hurdles, men and women, are definitely trying to take it,” Lyles said.” The men’s 100 is steeped in history. Past winners include some of the most luminous figures in Olympic track history: Jesse Owens. Carl Lewis. Bob Hayes. Usain Bolt. Either way, the 100 has long had an allure. The story of the last time the event was held in Paris, after all, produced not just a gold medal for This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up but also four Academy Awards for the film about his triumph, “Chariots of *****.” It was inevitable that the event would suffer from a bit of a vacuum after Bolt retired in 2017, as the most decorated sprinter in history and the winner of the 100 (and the 200) at three consecutive Olympics from 2008 to 2016. Bolt’s 100-meter world record of 9.58 seconds from 2009 ******** untouched. (He also owns the 200 world record.) The thing about Bolt, though, was that his charisma matched his talent. He possessed a sort of magnetic energy whenever he stepped on the track. He was must-see TV, his popularity transcending the relatively niche world of track and field. “He was a once-in-a-generation star,” This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , the NBC analyst and four-time Olympic medalist, said in a telephone interview. “So, no, it’s not the same sort of oh-my-gosh, you-have-to-see-this-guy-before-he-retires type of energy.” In his absence, athletes in other events have emerged as headliners. In the men’s 1,500-meter race, Jakob Ingebrigtsen of Norway and Josh Kerr of Britain are worthy of their own telenovela. They do not care for each other, which makes for compelling theater. Consider, too, the 400-meter hurdles. On the men’s side, Rai Benjamin of the ******* States, Karsten Warholm of Norway, and Alison dos Santos of Brazil have combined to run This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Among the women, Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone of the ******* States and Femke Bol of the Netherlands are pushing the event to new levels. McLaughlin-Levrone, who is on billboards across Paris, holds the world record. Bol is the world champion. And any list of marquee track and field events in Paris would be incomplete without a mention of the women’s 100, where Jamaica’s Olympic dominance could be threatened by the ********* star Sha’Carri Richardson. That final is Saturday. Lyles and the men are scheduled to run on Sunday. “I look at where Sha’Carri’s star is now,” Boldon said, “and I go, ‘Woo hoo!’ Can you imagine if Sha’Carri wins the first 100-meter gold in the Olympics for the ******* States since 1996, and then she has four years of hype leading into 2028 Games in Los Angeles?” The men’s and women’s 100 were the focus of the first season of “Sprint,” This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up ’s behind-the-scenes docuseries that detailed the lives of several sprinters through last year’s world championships in Budapest. Richardson and Lyles were front and center. The producers did not choose the 100 on a whim. They chose it because of its mystique and its accessibility. “Everyone gets being the fastest man or woman in the world,” said Jon Ridgeon, the chief executive of World Athletics. “It’s pretty *****. But we’ve got a wonderful array of disciplines, and wouldn’t it be great to feature some other disciplines going forward?” In Paris, Lyles seems determined to keep at least some of the attention on himself. True to form, he scoffed theatrically last month in London when he was asked about vying for Olympic gold against Kishane Thompson and Thompson’s Jamaican teammates. (Thompson has the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up this year.) “I beat everybody else that I touch,” Lyles said, stoking a rivalry that his event could probably use. “I don’t see why they’re any different.” This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Olympic #Mens #Moment This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/87103-olympic-men%E2%80%99s-100-is-it-still-a-can%E2%80%99t-miss-moment/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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