SAINT-DENIS, France Noah Lyles moved one step closer to becoming the first man since Usain Bolt to pull off the Olympic sprint double.
The American settled for second place in his mens 200-meter semifinal heat Wednesday night, not what he wanted but still good enough to advance to Thursdays highly anticipated final. Lyles crossed the finish line in 20.08 seconds, 12 hundredths of a second behind Letsile Tebogo of Botswana.
So far Lyles is following a similar pattern in the 200 that he did in the 100. He also finished second in both rounds of heats in the 100 before coming up big when it mattered.
On Sunday night, on Stade de Frances distinctive purple track, Lyles backed up his big talk and reaffirmed his claim to the title of Worlds Fastest Man. He won the closest-ever Olympic mens 100, clocking a personal-best 9.784 seconds to edge Jamaicas Kishane Thompson by five thousandths of a second.
It would be a surprise if the 200 final were quite so close.
Lyles has been almost unbeatable in his favorite race because the event reduces the impact of his sluggish starts and maximizes the qualities that make him special. He holds his speed as well as any sprinter since Bolt, typically enabling him to swallow up anyone in front of him as he rounds the curve and streaks toward the finish line.
Besides Tebogo, the top challengers to Lyles in the 200 final Thursday night could be his fellow Americans. Kenny Bednarek, the 2021 Olympic silver medalist in the 200, won Wednesday nights first semifinal heat in 20.0 seconds. Erriyon Knighton, still only 20, has won world championship medals in the 200 the past two years. He won his heat in 20.09.
When asked earlier this week how confident he felt about winning the mens 200 later, Lyles grinned and said, Pretty confident, cant lie.
Added Lyles, When I come off the turn, they will all be depressed.