Noah Lyles
Personal information
Born (1997-07-18) July 18, 1997[1]
Gainesville, Florida,[2]
Height5 ft 11 in (180 cm)[1]
Sport
CountryUnited States
SportTrack and field
EventSprints
ClubPURE Athletics[3]
TeamAdidas[4]
Turned pro2016[4]
Coached byLance Brauman[5]
Achievements and titles
Highest world ranking1st (100m/200m, 2023) [6] [7]
Personal bests

Noah Lyles OLY (born July 18, 1997)[8] is an American professional track and field sprinter competing in the 100 meters and 200 meters. He is the 2020 Tokyo Olympic 200 m bronze medalist and a six-time World champion, having won the 200 m and 4 x 100 m at the 2019 World Championships, the 200 m at the 2022 World Championships, and the 100 m, 200 m, and 4 x 100 m events at the 2023 World Championships, becoming the first man since Usain Bolt in 2015 to complete the sprint treble at a World Championships. At the 2022 Championships, Lyles also earned a silver medal in the 4 × 100 m relay. He holds personal bests of 9.83 seconds for the 100 m and 19.31 seconds for the 200 m, the latter being an American record making him the third fastest on the respective world all-time list.

Lyles won a gold medal in the 200 m during the 2014 Youth Olympic Games. He won gold medals for the 100 m and 4 × 100 m relay during the 2016 World U20 Championships. He is a five-time Diamond League champion, having secured the 100 m/200 m double in 2019.

Early life

Lyles was a gymnast as a youth and started track and field at 12 years of age. His parents Keisha Caine and Kevin Lyles competed in track and field at Seton Hall University.[9][10] He attended T. C. Williams High School (now Alexandria City High School) in Alexandria, Virginia.

Early career

Lyles represented the United States at the 2014 Youth Olympic Games where he won a gold medal in the 200 m.[11][12]

In January 2015, Lyles cleared 2.03 m (6 ft 7+34 in) in the high jump as a high school junior. In November 2015, he was named 2015 high school boys athlete of the year by Track & Field News.

In March 2016, Lyles won the 200 m at the New Balance Nationals Indoor. In April 2016, he won both the 100 m and 200 m at the 2016 Arcadia Invitational, setting new meeting records of 10.17 s and 20.48 s respectively.[13][14] In June 2016, Lyles won the 100 m in 10.08 s at the USA Junior Championships.[15]

In July 2016, Lyles went to the U.S. Olympic Trials to compete for spots on the Olympic team in the 100 m and the 200 m. He failed to advance from his first 100 m heat, but in the 200 m he won his semi-final and then placed fourth in the final with a time of 20.09 s, breaking a 31-year-old national high school record.[16][17][18] Though he didn't qualify for the 2016 Summer Olympics, he qualified for the 2016 World U20 Championships where he was a double gold medalist, taking the 100 m and 4 × 100 m relay titles.[19][20]

Professional

Lyles had committed to compete for the Florida Gators at the University of Florida, but in July 2016, Noah and his younger brother Josephus instead turned professional and signed with Adidas.[4][21] In November 2016, Lyles was again named high school boys athlete of the year for 2016 by Track & Field News.

Lyles started 2017 with his first senior national title in the 300 m at the 2017 USA Indoor Championships in the thin air of Albuquerque, New Mexico, improving the indoor world record by one hundredth of a second to 31.87 s.[22][23] He earned a silver medal in the 4 × 200-meter relay with team USA at the 2017 World Relays. Lyles won two meets in the 2017 IAAF Diamond League circuit, winning the final ahead of American champion Ameer Webb and world champion Ramil Guliyev. However, injuries prevented him from competing much of the season and he missed the 2017 World Championships as a result.

2018

Lyles returned to Albuquerque to compete at the 2018 USA Indoor Championships, but in the 60-meter dash instead of the 300 m. He made it through his first heat while equaling his personal best time of 6.57 s, but failed to advance through his semi-final. Having failed to make the national team for the 2018 World Indoor Championships, he turned his focus to preparing for the outdoor season. He opened with a win in the 200 m at the IAAF Diamond League Doha meet, setting a new personal best with a time of 19.83 s. A few weeks later he ran the less common 150 m at the adidas Boston Games, winning in a personal best time of 14.77 s.[24] He returned to the 200 m at the IAAF Diamond League in Eugene, winning and improving his personal best time to 19.69 s. This time matched the world leading time set by Clarence Munyai earlier that year.[25][26]

At the 2018 USA Championships he focused on the 100 m instead, matching the world lead of 9.89 s in the semi-final. Mike Rodgers had set the world lead a day before in a separate heat, but he did not start in the semi-finals. This left Lyles' primary rival to be Ronnie Baker, who had run the 100 m in 9.78 s at the Prefontaine Classic earlier that year, but with a wind velocity just over the allowable limit for record purposes (+2.4 m/s).[25] In the final Baker got out a few meters ahead of Lyles out of the blocks, but Lyles started to come back halfway through the race and just passed Baker in the last meter to win in 9.88 s, a new world lead and personal best time for Lyles.[27][28] He became the youngest U.S. champion in the 100 m since Sam Graddy won in 1984.[29]

Lyles world lead in the 100 m would later be beaten by Baker (9.87 s) and then Christian Coleman (9.79 s), but at the Herculis IAAF Diamond League meet in Monaco Lyles set a new 200 m world lead and personal best time in 19.65 s. The time placed him in the top-10 fastest men in the 200 m of all time.[30][31] Before that Lyles equaled his personal best and world lead at the Athletissima IAAF Diamond League meet to win a greatly anticipated showdown against Michael Norman, who had set the indoor world record in the 400-meter dash earlier that year.[26][32][33] Lyles went into the IAAF Diamond League final, the Weltklasse Zürich, as the favorite. He was again matched up against world champion Ramil Guliyev who recently also become European champion, setting a personal best of 19.76 s in the process.[34] The two were placed in adjacent lanes and ran evenly through the bend, but Lyles started to pull away on the straight and finished in 19.67 s.[35] It was his fourth time under 19.70 s in the same season. Only one other individual has been under 19.70 s four times in a career, world record holder Usain Bolt who also did it four times during his record-breaking 2009 season.[36]

2019

In 2019, Lyles opened the season by running 100 meters races, running a 9.86 (+0.9) world leader in Shanghai on May 18. In his first 200-meter race, at the Pietro Mennea Golden Gala meet, he equalled Mennea's long standing 1979 world record time running a 19.72 (+0.7). A month later at Athletissima in Lausanne, he dropped his personal best to 19.50 (−0.1) to move into the number four position on the all time list.[37] A week later he ran a 9.92 (+0.3) 100 in Monaco. With the extended schedule in 2019, he ran the US National Championships at the end of July, taking the 200-meter title in 19.78 (−0.7) into a headwind in Des Moines. Then in Paris he ran 19.65 (+0.2).

Noah Lyles (R) en route to the 200 m victory at Doha 2019.

Lyles won gold medals in the 200 m and the 4 × 100 m relay at the 2019 World Athletics Championships held in Doha, Qatar.[38]

2021–present

On August 4, 2021, Lyles won a bronze medal at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics in the 200-meter men's final with a time of 19.74 seconds, equalling his season's best from the U.S. Olympic Trials earlier that year. He followed this Olympic performance with a 19.52 (+1.5) in Eugene, Oregon, on August 21, which was his second best performance and the ninth fastest 200 m mark in history.

On July 21, 2022, during the World Athletics Championships on home soil in Eugene, Oregon, Lyles claimed his second global title in the 200 m and surpassed Michael Johnson's long standing national record of 19.32 by running 19.31, which moved him to third on the world all-time list.[39] He capped his fine season in the Zürich Diamond League final with victory in 200 m, securing his fourth Diamond Trophy over the distance and fifth overall. Lyles was undefeated in his specialist event that year, breaking 20 seconds in all 12 of his races, including heats and finals.[40]

On August 20, 2023, during the World Athletics Championships held in Budapest Lyles won gold in the 100m and setting a personal best in the final of 9.83.

On August 25, 2023, Lyles won a gold medal at the 2023 World Athletics Championships in the 200-meter men's final with the time 19.52.[41] This is his third gold medal in the 200 m and fifth gold medal overall in the World Athletics Championships. With his three 200 m gold medals in the World Athletics Championships, he surpasses Michael Johnson (2) and Calvin Smith (2) and this places him to second on the world all-time list at 200 metres at the World Athletics Championships, only behind Usain Bolt with four gold medals.

Achievements

Lyles competing in the 200m final in Budapest.

Information from World Athletics profile unless otherwise noted.[8]

Personal bests

EventMarkWind (m/s)LocationDateNotes
100 m9.83+0.0Budapest, HungaryAugust 20, 2023[42]
150 m14.56+1.4Atlanta, GA, United StatesMay 6, 20233rd of all time
200 m19.31+0.4Eugene, OR, United StatesJuly 21, 2022WL NR, third fastest in history
400 m47.04Forestville, MD, United StatesApril 23, 2016
4 × 100 m relay37.10Doha, QatarOctober 5, 2019WL NR, 2nd of all-time
4 × 200 m relay1:19.88Nassau, BahamasApril 23, 2017
60 m indoor6.51Boston, MA, United StatesFebruary 4, 2023
200 m indoor20.63New York, NY, United StatesMarch 13, 2016
300 m indoor31.87 AAlbuquerque, NM, United StatesMarch 4, 2017Altitude-assisted[43]
High jump indoor2.03 mBlacksburg, VA, United StatesJanuary 31, 2015


Lyles has broken 20 seconds for 200 metres 38 times --- more than any other athlete.

International competitions

Representing the  United States and the Americas (Continental Cup only)
YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventTimeWind (m/s)Notes
2013 World Youth Championships Donetsk, Ukraine 9th 200 m 21.58 -2.5
2nd Medley relay 1:50.14 PB
2014 Youth Olympic Games Nanjing, China 1st 200 m 20.80 +0.3
2015 Pan American U20 Championships Edmonton, Canada 2nd 100 m 10.18 +0.4
1st 200 m 20.27 +1.3
2016 World U20 Championships Bydgoszcz, Poland 1st 100 m 10.17 -0.2 SB
1st 4 × 100 m relay 38.93 PB
2017 World Relays Nassau, Bahamas 2nd 4 × 200 m relay 1:19.88 PB
2018 Continental Cup Ostrava, Czech Republic 1st 100 m 10.01 0.0
1st 4 × 100 m relay 38.05 PB
2019 World Relays Yokohama, Japan 2nd 4 × 100 m relay 38.07
World Championships Doha, Qatar 1st 200 m 19.83 +0.3
1st 4 × 100 m relay 37.10 WL NR, 2nd all time
2021 Olympic Games Tokyo, Japan 3rd 200 m 19.74 -0.5 =SB
2022 World Championships Eugene, OR, United States 1st 200 m 19.31 +0.4 WL NR, 3rd all time
2nd 4 × 100 m relay 37.55
2023 World Championships Budapest, Hungary 1st 100 m 9.83 0.0 WL PB
1st 200 m 19.52 –0.2
1st 4 × 100 m relay 37.38

Circuit wins and titles

200 meters wins, other events specified in parentheses

National championships

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventTimeWind (m/s)Notes
2013U.S. World Youth TrialsEdwardsville, Illinois3rd200 m21.62−3.9
2015USATF U20 ChampionshipsEugene, Oregon1st100 m10.14+2.0PB
1st100 m10.18+1.8PB
2016USATF U20 ChampionshipsClovis, California1st100 m10.08 w+2.2Wind-assisted
U.S. Olympic TrialsEugene, Oregon22nd100 m10.16+1.8SB[45]
4th200 m20.09+1.6PB
2017USATF Indoor ChampionshipsAlbuquerque, New Mexico1st300 m31.87 AAltitude assisted, WB
USATF ChampionshipsSacramento, California4th (heats)200 m20.54−2.5Q[note 1]
2018USATF Indoor ChampionshipsAlbuquerque, New Mexico9th60 m6.59 AAltitude-assisted[47]
USATF ChampionshipsDes Moines, Iowa1st100 m9.88+1.1WL PB
2019USATF ChampionshipsDes Moines, Iowa1st200 m19.78−0.7
2021U.S. Olympic TrialsEugene, Oregon7th100 m10.05+0.8
1st200 m19.74+0.3WL
2022USATF ChampionshipsEugene, Oregon1st200 m19.67−0.3
2023USATF ChampionshipsEugene, Oregon3rd100 m10.00+0.1

Season's bests

w = wind-assisted (wind velocity more than +2.0 m/s)

See also

Notes

  1. Qualified for the semis, but did not start (DNS).[46]

References

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  2. "Noah Lyles". teamusa.org. USOsalam melecumC. Archived from the original on December 26, 2019. Retrieved July 29, 2020.
  3. Eder, Larry (December 28, 2017). "PURE Athletics, some thoughts on what is behind the great races". runblogrun.com. RunBlogRun. Retrieved January 24, 2019.
  4. 1 2 3 Maese, Rick (July 22, 2016). "Teenage track stars Noah, Josephus Lyles turn pro, sign with Adidas". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 24, 2019.
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