Kishane Thompson beats Noah Lyles in first 100m head-to-head since Paris Olympics

Sign up now: Get the biggest sports news in your inbox

Jamaica's Kishane Thompson celebrates his win in the men's 100m final.

Jamaica's Kishane Thompson celebrating his win in the men's 100m final at the Silesia Diamond League meet on Aug 16.

PHOTO: AFP

Follow topic:
  • Kishane Thompson won the 100m at the Silesia Diamond League in 9.87sec, equalling the meet record.
  • Noah Lyles finished second in 9.90sec, calling it a "great stepping stone" towards the upcoming Tokyo games.
  • Thompson, who beat Lyles after losing to him in Paris, downplayed the win, focusing on self-competition.

AI generated

Kishane Thompson eclipsed Olympic 100m champion Noah Lyles at the Silesia Diamond League meet on Aug 16 and Keely Hodgkinson made an impressive comeback over 800m a year since winning gold at the Paris Games.

A host of world and Olympic champions headlined by the likes of Karsten Warholm – with an incredible performance in the 400m hurdles – Armand “Mondo” Duplantis, Faith Kipyegon and Femke Bol shone in hot and humid conditions in front of more than 40,000 fans in the Polish city of Chorzow.

In their first meeting since Lyles won Olympic gold by just five-thousandths of a second at Paris 2024, Thompson made an electric start and led from gun to tape for victory in 9.87sec.

“My job is to get the job done,” said Thompson. “I enjoyed competition against Noah today... nobody is perfect, but I am working on improving my strengths and improving on my weaknesses.

“Paris last year was a big learning factor. I learnt it is me against myself.”

Lyles had to be content with second in 9.90sec as the athletes fine-tune preparations for the Sept 13-21 world championships in Tokyo.

“It makes me really excited for not only today, but also for next week and Tokyo,” the American said.

“The more I run, the better I am getting. I get more excited each day and it is working. I need to keep competing.”

Noah Lyles of the US, Kenneth Bednarek of the US and Jamaica's Kishane Thompson in action during the men's 100m final.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Second-placed Noah Lyles congratulates Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson on his 100m final win.

PHOTO: REUTERS

There was a timely return for Hodgkinson as the 23-year-old Briton showed no sign of the lingering hamstring problems that had sidelined her for months as she clocked 1min 54.74sec, the fastest in the world in 2025.

“I was just happy to step on the track after more than a year,” she said.

“I planned to run a fast time because I don’t have five races any more before Tokyo, I only have today and the meeting in Lausanne next week. So it had to be fast and I’m happy that it worked.”

Kenya’s serial world record breaker Kipyegon missed out on the longstanding world record in the women’s 3,000m.

Six weeks after improving her own world 1,500m record in Eugene, Kipyegon clocked 8:07.04 over the non-Olympic distance, falling just short of the 8:06.11 world record set by China’s Wang Junxia in 1993.

“I am so happy. I wanted to run a longer distance,” Kipyegon said. “It is all about Tokyo now, but Tokyo is a championship race, so anything can happen.”

Warholm looked in astonishing form in the 400m hurdles after a two-month training block at home in Norway, timing a world-leading time of 46.28sec.

It was the third-fastest time ever run over the distance, topped only by the 29-year-old’s own world record of 45.94sec and American Rai Benjamin’s 46.17sec.

“That race was great. I had great rhythm and speed throughout,” said Warholm.

Dutch star Femke Bol comfortably extended her six-race winning streak in the women’s 400m hurdles in 2025 with victory in 51.91sec – another world-leading time.

Duplantis, fresh from setting his 13th pole vault world record with 6.29m in Budapest on Aug 12, failed to hit those heights but secured victory in 6.10m, having failed three attempts at 6.20.

World leader Melissa Jefferson-Wooden equalled Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce’s meet record when she clocked 10.66sec for an impressive victory in the women’s 100m.

World champion Sha’Carri Richardson could only finish sixth after a troubled few weeks following her arrest for a violent altercation with her partner.

Jamaica’s two-time world champion Shericka Jackson claimed the honours in the 200m in 22.17sec as she powers back to form.

Cordell Tinch left it late, but the in-form American powered past three-time world champion Grant Holloway for a third victory this season in the 110m hurdles in 13.03sec.

Olympic champion Masai Russell came out on top of a stacked field in the 100m hurdles in a Diamond League record of 12.19sec ahead of American teammate Tonea Marshall.

“This win is very important to me because these are the women I’m going to be racing against at the world champs,” she said.

Marileidy Paulino of the Dominican Republic edged out Bahrain’s Salwa Eid Naser for victory in 49.18sec in the women’s 400m and Ethiopia’s Gudaf Tsegay won the women’s 1,500m in 3:50.62. AFP

See more on