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How Noah Lyles became Olympic 100m champion: A 300-page textbook, biomechanics and a stickman

Sixty metres into the men’s 100-metre Olympic final in Paris and Noah Lyles is third. He is three-hundredths of a second down on his compatriot Fred Kerley and Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson.

Yet — and this may sound bizarre — that is exactly where he needs to be.

Lyles has unmatched top-end speed. He wins as Usain Bolt used to, opening up his stride (to a ridiculous 2.5metres) and eating up ground on others before cruising past. He holds form while they struggle and decelerate.

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The headline is Lyles winning by five-hundredths of a second in the closest men’s 100m Olympic final ever — and the hardest for which to qualify.