Positive COVID test revealed after Lyles' bronze

1 month ago 3
  • Coley Harvey, ESPN Staff WriterAug 8, 2024, 03:13 PM ET

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    • Previously covered Florida State for Orlando Sentinel and Georgia Tech for Macon Telegraph
    • Northwestern University graduate

SAINT-DENIS, France -- After Noah Lyles finished in third place during the 200-meter final, NBC's broadcast indicated it had spoken with his mother, who said Lyles had been diagnosed with COVID on Tuesday.

Lyles later joined the broadcast and said he got tested after not feeling well around 5 a.m. Tuesday morning. He added that he never thought about not running after his diagnosis.

Lyles isn't sure if he will still participate in the 4x100-meter, but he said the Americans have the speed to run the race without him.

One day after losing the 200-meter semifinal to Letsile Tebogo of Botswana, Lyles was unable to surpass him once again in the final Thursday night.

Tebogo ran an African-record 19.46 to earn the 200-meter gold medal. Finishing just behind him with silver was American Kenny Bednarek, who posted a 19.62-second showing.

As soon as he crossed the finish line third, Lyles laid down on his back on the track. Within moments, he was surrounded by athletic trainers and members of the Paris Olympics medical staff, who moved him toward a wall as they administered some level of treatment.

At one point, Lyles was seen wearing a mask before being placed in a chair which was eventually wheeled into the nearby tunnel.

Just after Wednesday's semifinal heat, Lyles did not come through the media mixed zone. He instead was taken directly to medical for what was an undisclosed reason.

During Thursday's race, all eight runners got off to a somewhat even start. Lyles was in the hunt early. Around the 100-meter mark, Tebogo and Bednarek began pulling away. Although Lyles was still hanging close with them, Tebogo's lead was one he was not relinquishing easily.

Minutes after the race, Lyles was also handed a yellow card for a violation of Technical Rule 7.1 for "improper conduct." It wasn't immediately clear why he was given it, but during introductions, he did demonstrably jump onto the track as he heard his name.

While pumping up the crowd before the race, Lyles smacked the box housing the speaker in his lane so hard that the number on it box fell off.

Lyles' 200-meter showing followed his 9.79-second, personal-best effort in Sunday's close 100-meter dash. He earned the gold medal in what was the closest 100-meter final since at least Moscow in 1980 -- or perhaps ever. Back then, Great Britain's Allan Wells narrowly beat Silvio Leonard in 10.25 seconds in an era when timing didn't go down to the thousandths of a second.

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