The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Lyles on four-gold mission to light up Paris

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NOAH LYLES may or may not be the next Usain Bolt, but the American sprinter understand­s better than most that anyone who wants the job as the face of world athletics requires a combinatio­n of charisma and talent.

Ever since Bolt retired nearly seven years ago, athletics, without much success, has been searching for the Jamaican’s successor.

The sport is littered with interestin­g characters but record-setting shot putters and steeplecha­sers do not hold global fascinatio­n.

The mythical title of world’s fastest man is what grabs attention and if accomplish­ed with panache and flair even better.

Bolt brought a magnetic personalit­y and other worldly speed to the track that produced a treasure trove of gold medals, including eight mined from three Olympics and records that still stand, while becoming an internatio­nal celebrity.

It is that bar Lyles confronts at the Paris

Olympics, where he is already being positioned as athletics’ front man.

From a marketing standpoint, Lyles ticks all the boxes.

The American speedster is a natural showman who embraces the spotlight, speaks his mind, knows how to make an entrance and is as comfortabl­e on a Paris fashion runway as the starting blocks.

But compared to Bolt, his work on the track is thin.

He sped to three gold (100m, 200m, 4x100m) at last year’s world championsh­ips in Budapest but took a single bronze at his only Olympics so far, hardly the resume that fires up fan interest.

On the 100-metre all-time rankings, Lyles sits well down the list tied for 15th with a career best of 9.83, seconds not anywhere near the class of Bolt’s world record of 9.58.

Six Americans have run faster, including current rivals Christian Coleman (2019 100m world champion) and Fred

Kerley (2022 100m world champion).

If you have not yet produced eye-catching times, then set outrageous goals.

For Lyles, that is expanding his sprinting repertoire to include the 400m, which will allow the 26-year-old a chance to grab a relay spot and a shot at four golds on the track in Paris (100m, 200m, 4x100m and 4x400m), something not even the great Bolt managed.

Only two men have claimed four athletics golds at a single Olympics, Jesse Owens and Carl Lewis, but their hauls included wins in the long jump, not on the track.

The sprinter coming closest to that feat was American Florence Griffith Joyner at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, where she won the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay and silver in the 4x400m.

“I’m serious,” Lyles told Reuters. “I just ran the 4x400m in Glasgow (indoor world championsh­ips), and I felt that was definitely one of my ways of saying that this isn’t a joke.” — Reuters

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