Seville storms past Lyles

Jamaica’s Oblique Seville trumped Olympic champion Noah Lyles in the 100m at Wednesday’s Diamond League meet in Lausanne, just three weeks away from the world championships in Tokyo.

Once again, Lyles stuttered out of the blocks, a slow start handing Seville the advantage from the start, something the Jamaican then never looked in danger of ceding.

Seville clocked an impressive 9.87 seconds in torrential rain at the Stade Olympique de la Pontaise, Lyles battling back in a strong finish to snatch second in 10.02sec. Jamaican Ackeem Blake (10.02) and South African Akani Simbine (10.05) finished third and fourth respectively.

“Running 9.87 in those conditions shows I can go much faster, anywhere in the world, that’s a good time,” said Seville, who won a world bronze as part of the Jamaican 4x100m relay squad in Budapest in 2023.

It was a repeat of last month’s London Diamond League when the 24-year-old Seville also got the better of the American.

“I’ve beaten the Olympic champion twice, in London and here, and that gives me a lot of confidence heading into the championships. It’s been a while since a Jamaican man has won the 100m at a global championship, and of course, I believe I can be the one to do it.”

Lyles was left to rue a “horrible reaction to the gun. That was the only thing wrong.”

“Technically I felt good, my warm-up was good, but once you miss the start at this level the race is basically over,” he said.

“Physically I feel great, and I am confident every race will get better and better. The goal is to sharpen the details, especially my drive phase and my start, heading to Tokyo and the world championships.”

Kenya’s Olympic 800m champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi also suffered a setback as American Josh Hoey claimed victory in the 800m.

Hoey, the reigning world indoor champion, held his own down the home straight for victory in 1:42.82.

“I wanted to get out hard, let the leaders take the rain, and then make my move with 100 to go,” said Hoey.

“It felt like being a kid again, playing in the rain. I’ve never raced in anything like this before. It reminded me of cross-country growing up, where it comes down to being the toughest and the most patient.”

Wanyonyi looked out of it with 200m to run, but battled back for second in 1:43.29 ahead of Spain’s Mohamed Attaoui and Briton Max Burgin, with Canadian world champion Marco Arop in fifth.

But there was no such drama for Britain’s Olympic women’s 800m gold medallist Keely Hodgkinson, who continued her comeback with a meet record over the two-lap discipline in 1:55.69 ahead of Switzerland’s Audrey Werro.

“When the pace goes like that, you just forget about everyone else,” said Hodgkinson, who returned to the track last week in Silesia after 12 months out with hamstring problems since winning at the Paris Games. SuperSport.

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