Business Day

Young US runners fill void left by Usain Bolt

- Agency Staff Doha AFP

Exit Usain Bolt, enter the US. As the desert dust settled on the World Championsh­ips on Sunday, American sprinters were left celebratin­g their biggest medal haul in more than a decade.

After picking up just one gold medal in the men’s sprinting events in London two years ago, the Americans headed home with five out of a possible seven golds stowed in their luggage.

It was the largest tally since the six sprinting golds won by the US at the 2007 championsh­ips in Osaka, a year before the dawn of Bolt’s decade of dominance at the Beijing Olympics. In Doha, the US men bagged gold in the 100m, 200m and 110m hurdles before victories in the 4x100m and 4x400m relays.

More significan­tly, Doha confirmed the emergence of a new generation of US sprinters who will head to the Olympics in Tokyo in 2020 as the men to beat.

Christian Coleman, the newly crowned 100m world champion, and Noah Lyles, the victor in the 200m, delivered performanc­es in Doha that suggest they are capable of dominating for years. Coleman, who narrowly avoided being banned from the championsh­ips after missing three drugs tests in a year, became the sixth-fastest man in history with his 100m win in 9.76sec.

Lyles surged to 200m gold in 19.83sec. Both Coleman, 23, and Lyles, 22, have youth on their side and are preparing to take their rivalry to a heightened level next season. After restrictin­g themselves to one individual event in Doha, Coleman and Lyles have vowed to chase a 100m-200m double in Tokyo.

“We’re both competitiv­e and young and we’re carrying the torch for US sprinting,” Coleman said of his rivalry with Lyles. “I think we make each other better. When I’m working hard every day, I know he’s down there in Florida grinding.

“So whenever we match up it’s going to be fireworks. I’m looking forward to our rivalry in the future.”

Lyles said that reports of a rift with Coleman earlier this season had been overblown.

“We’re very competitiv­e and very talented and we want to go out there and make the US the best country in the world,” Lyles said. “So every time we step on the track, whether it’s against each other or together, we’re going to give our best 100%.”

That sense of shared determinat­ion was in view on Saturday, when Coleman and Lyles led the American men to victory in the 4x100m in the secondfast­est time yet.

The US has a dismal record in what in theory should be one of their strongest events and had not won the relay gold since 2007.

“We broke a generation­al curse today and we’re going to keep that going for years to come,” Lyles wrote on Twitter after the win.

With personal bests in the 100m and 200m that are faster than Bolt’s over each distance at the same age, the charismati­c Lyles looks the best bet to fill the vacuum created by the Jamaican icon’s retirement. /

 ??  ?? Noah Lyles
Noah Lyles

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