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Kishane Thompson, the Olympics, and the season everything changed  

Kishane Thompson, the Olympics, and the season everything changed  

This is Deji Ogeyingbo’s feature on Kishane Thompson, the Olympic silver medalist in the 100 meters, and the expectations of this young Jamaican from his homeland.

Kishane Thompson, the Olympics, and the season everything changed  

 

The men’s 100m is one of the most watched events at the Olympic Games. Paris wasn’t different. All you do is run for less than ten seconds, and you are home and dry. It is that simple, and yet it is not. In the French capital, eight men lined up for one chance for glory, and it eventually went to Noah Lyles.

All sorts of records were broken over the distance in Paris. I just wanted to let you know that I won’t bore you with all of that for now. After all, the numbers for the non-purists weren’t much of a great deal. It was mainly about the conversations on how Usain Bolt made the event look so simple compared to how they had to wait a few seconds before they determined who the winner was between Lyles and the new kid on the block, Kishane Thompson.

Thompson was meant to become the next global star of the sport after Usain Bolt. The Jamaican had undoubtedly been the bookies’ favorite for the win heading into the 100m. His world was about to change. Take down the Loquacious Lyles, and the world would be his. There is usually talk about how an Olympian takes four years to train to run for 10 seconds. Destinies and big sponsorship contracts all depend on how you execute those moments.

And to be fair to Thompson, he was well primed to take the Gold. He had taken down all the runners that got to the final before Paris, except the Americans. Letsile Tebogo, Akani Simbine, and even his countryman, Oblique Seville, had failed to win a race against him. His confidence was through the roof at that point. The snag, though, was he was yet to face either of the Americans, especially when the stakes were high.

Kishane Thompson, photo by Nike Pre Clasic/Diamond League AG

It’s the old cliché, but it’s true: time and work matter. Lyles and Fred Kerley have been doing it at the top level for a long time; there’s a synchronicity and chemistry to what they do, which multiplies how they can manage their nerves and execute their races flawlessly. It sounds simple, but when you break down the race and how Lyles had the best execution, you realize the lack of experience played a part in Thompson’s chance of taking Gold in Paris.

The new Olympic silver medalist expressed no regrets after competing in one of the fastest 100m finals in…

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