Lyles trumps Tebogo in Zurich as Alfred shines
Olympic 100m champions Noah Lyles and Julien Alfred will head to the world championships in Tokyo in two weeks' time on the back of impressive victories at Thursday's Diamond League finals on Thursday.
Lyles and Alfred were but two of the cream of track and field's elite who rose to the top in a scintillating night of action at a 25 000 sell-out Letzigrund Stadium in Zurich
Lyles produced a strong finish to outpace Botswanan rival Letsile Tebogo for victory in the men's 200m in 19.74 seconds for a record-breaking sixth Diamond League track trophy.
6⃣ #DiamondLeague titles for @LylesNoah!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Noah Lyles just pips Letsile Tebogo to victory with 19.74 in the 200m #DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @macroprophoto pic.twitter.com/5HjKHtBGjr
"Another record in the list. It is pretty nice to have that," said Lyles.
"The most important is getting wins. I know if I panicked I was not going to win. If you are tight you are done for."
Lyles said he would head to Tokyo "with a lot of energy. I will use that to my advantage".
Alfred had earlier clocked 10.76sec for her win over 100m ahead of Jamaica's Tia Clayton (10.84) in what was the perfect tonic before departing to the September 13-21 world championships in Tokyo.
"I feel like I want to add another gold in my collection," she said. "I am much fitter than before and also mentally, I am on the right place where I want to be."
A cool 10.76!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Julien Alfred cruises to her second #DiamondLeague title in two years in the women's 100m. #DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @macroprophoto pic.twitter.com/4vEJ9mFeyz
Twenty-six Diamond League champions were unveiled at the Letzigrund Stadium as quality oozed through at every turn as athletes fine-tuned preparations for the Tokyo worlds.
One of the most competitive events on the men's circuit is the 800m, with athletes edging ever nearer to David Rudisha's world record of 1:40.91.
Kenya's Emmanuel Wanyonyi faded in the home stretch in Zurich, but just managed to hold on for victory in 1:42.37, 0.05sec ahead of Britain's Max Burgin, with Canada's world champion Marco Arop taking third.
Wanyonyi wins by a whisker!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Kenya's @Olympics champion holds off a late charge from Max Burgin to win a third successive #DiamondLeague title with 1:42.37 in the 800m.#DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @macroprophoto pic.twitter.com/qAqK8ByLwN
There were no surprises in the 400m hurdles as Dutch world champion Femke Bol improved on her own meet to 52.18sec, her 30th straight hurdles race victory on the Diamond League circuit.
"it's crazy, another Diamond League season undefeated, it's really cool!" said Bol.
Meeting record for Femke Bol!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
The 🇳🇱 ace clocks 52.18 to claim a 30th #DiamondLeague win and a fifth series title in a row. #DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @chiaramontesan2 / @macroprophoto pic.twitter.com/roM6vrZjxp
'I WANT MORE, I'M GREEDY'
Norway's Karsten Warholm, the world record holder and three-time world champion, then nonchalantly repeated Bol's feat, bettering his 2019 mark with a new meet record of 46.70sec.
"That was my target for this meeting," said Warholm. "I'm on the right path for Tokyo. I have three titles as world champions and I want more. I'm greedy."
Meeting record for @kwarholm!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Karsten Warholm blasts to a breathtaking 46.70 in the 400m hurdles, crowning himself #DiamondLeague champion for the first time since 2021.#DiamondLeague#DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @chiaramontesan2 pic.twitter.com/LDRvztV7kW
Two loaded short hurdles races went the way of in-form American Cordell Tinch for the men over 110m and Jamaican Ackera Nugent (12.30sec) in the women's 100m.
Tinch underlined his credentials as the favourite for Tokyo with a winning time of 12.92sec, equalling the meet record -- and then world record -- set by double Olympic champion Roger Kingdom back in 1989.
Meeting record for @cordizzlepinch!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Cordell Tinch glides to his fifth #DiamondLeague win of the season and his first Diamond Trophy with 12.92 in the 110m hurdles.#DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @chiaramontesan2 / @macroprophoto pic.twitter.com/bOe1CV2dyj
"It is about consistency," said Tinch, who set a world lead of 12.87 in May.
"All I have done this year has been a next big moment, every time I get into something, it is another big moment. And I am ready for the next one. I am ready to go to Tokyo and be great."
Dutchman Niels Laros ran a timely national record of 3:29.20 in the men's 1 500m, which promises to be one of the most competitive events in Tokyo and there was a Swiss record of 1:55.91 for in-form Audrey Werro in the women's 800m.
A Dutch record in the 1500m!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Niels Laros storms to the #DiamondLeague title with 3:29.20.#DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @macroprophoto pic.twitter.com/shLWDd6qE1
Bahrain's Salwa Eid Naser trumped Marileidy Paulino for the women's 400m title, winning in a meet record of 48.70sec, while American Jacory Patterson clocked a personal best of 43.85sec for the men's one-lap honours.
American Christian Coleman, in 9.97sec, edged South African Akani Simbine for victory in a men's 100m missing most big names, while US compatriot Brittany Brown won the women's 200m in 22.13.
Photo finish in the 100m!@__coleman just beats @AkaniSimbine and @TrayvonBromell with 9.97 to regain the Diamond Trophy.#DiamondLeague#DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
📷 @chiaramontesan2 pic.twitter.com/GrVHFj8u0D
The stand-out performance in the field was a huge, world-leading best of 91.51m by Germany's Julian Weber in the javelin, with India's world champion Neeraj Chopra finishing third.
World lead for Weber!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Julian Weber wins the javelin with a monster PB of 91.51m.
That's the furthest throw ever at a #DLFinal💎 #ZurichDL🇨🇭 #DiamondLeague
📷 @chiaramontesan2 pic.twitter.com/pLHpb6pDa1
There was so such joy for Japan's reigning Olympic and world champion Haruka Kitaguchi, who managed a best of only 60.72m for sixth and last spot in a competition won by Greece's Elina Tzengko (64.57).
64.57m!
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 28, 2025
Elina Tzengko wins her first ever #DiamondLeague title in the women's javelin.#DLFinal💎#ZurichDL🇨🇭
📷 @chiaramontesan2 pic.twitter.com/zoozFe5H1G
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