Nigeria's Udodi Onwuzurike misses out on 200m final
...Lyles blasts into the 200m final by recording world's leading time
By Maxwell Kumoye and Mitch Phillips
America's Noah Lyles showed that he is still the man to beat over 200 metres when the three-times world champion scorched to a huge world-leading 19.51 seconds in his semi-final on Thursday night in Tokyo.
It sets up a mouth-watering Friday final with fellow American Kenny Bednarek and Jamaican Bryan Levell, who were similarly impressive but, unlike Lyles who ran hard through the line, turned the burners off 50 metres out.
Nigeria's Udodi Chudi Onwuzurike finished 7th in the same race in 20.26s. On Wednesday ran 20.27s to reach today's semi final.
Lyles, third in the 100m on Sunday after a delayed start to his season, looked relaxed on the start line of his preferred event, as a cool breeze and light drizzle made conditions much more gentle than in the oppressive previous days.
Going in the third of three heats, he clearly decided that he wanted to lay down a marker – and get the best final lane – by going out hard, and continuing.
Bednarek is fuelling himself in the anger of finishing fourth in the 100 after qualifying so well. With two Olympic 200m silvers and another from the 2022 world championships he is well overdue an appearance on the top step.
Bednarek’s run was a carbon copy of his heat as he blasted the bend then settled for a controlled cruise home to clock 19.88, a tenth faster than in the heat.
Despite the impressive showings by the U.S. duo, Levell will go into the final oozing confidence that he can complete a Jamaican sprint double after Oblique Seville’s 100m victory.
The last time they achieved that was the last of Usain Bolt’s doubles in 2015, and Jamaica have not managed a medal of any colour in the four championships since.
Levell, third fastest in the field via his 19.69 in Budapest last month, also ran a devastating bend and, despite easing through the last 70 metres, clocked 19.78.
Following him home in 19.95 was Botswana’s Olympic champion Letsile Tebogo, also desperate to make up for his 100m experience after he was disqualified for a false start in the final.
Two other Africans, Tapiwanashe Makarawu of Zimbabwe and South Africa's Sinesipho Dambile advanced to the final as the two fastest time.
Australia’s 17-year-old, Gout Gout, hopes of appearing in his first major championship, managed only 20.36 for fourth place in his heat and failed to progress.
All the finalists are sub 20s and the final is on Friday night, alongside the women's final.
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