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World’s fastest man Noah Lyles won Olympics 2024 100m title wearing fittingly-named £13,500 watch and custom necklace

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NOAH LYLES rocketed into history wearing a £13,500 tribute to the first spacecraft that took men to the moon.

What better way to recognise the “gravity” of his achievement…

Noah Lyles has made a statement on the track and on his arm
Rex
Getty
Lyles hailed his 100m triumph with his special necklace looking stylish[/caption]

The new Olympic 100m champion slipped on his OMEGA Speedmaster Dark Side of the Moon “Apollo 8” wristwatch for one of the greatest ever sprint finals.

The 27-year-old American also wore a chunky chain necklace, apparently customised and made of white metal.

That could include platinum, white gold and silver, as well as other grey materials.

But there was only one colour of metal Lyles was interested in on the track.

And it’s the same one that, for the blue-riband event at least, he is taking home – GOLD.

Lyles clocked 9.79 in a jaw-dropping comeback.

Yet he still only beat Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson in a photo-finish for the top gong by 0.05secs.

It’s that sort of precision and ability to get the job done that was needed back in the pioneering days of the Space Race six decades ago.

Rex
Lyles pipped Kishane Thompson after producing a barnstorming finish[/caption]

LYLES WOULD'VE LOVED 'WORLD OF SPORT'

By DAVE KIDD

NOAH LYLES is the newly crowned fastest man on the planet.

As the Olympic 100 metres champion, he  possesses one of the greatest titles in all of sport.

Yet while Lyles is a maverick self-publicist, he needs to be.

Like virtually all of the 10,714 athletes competing at the Paris Games, the American is still fighting for recognition.

After winning one of the most dramatic sprints of all time, Lyles said his biggest ambition was to have a sneaker — that’s a trainer to you and me — named after him.

Not even Michael Johnson, one of America’s greatest track stars of recent decades, was given that accolade, bemoaned Lyles, and athletics is a “global sport” he pointed out.

Lyles is one of those ‘typical  Americans’ that most English people instinctively dislike. He’s a show-off, a limelight-hogger, a loudmouth.

If a biblical flood were coming and this particular Noah was building an ark, you’d suspect he’d build it just for himself.

And yet Lyles is strangely likeable. Particularly because, atypically for an American, he appreciates the global nature of sport.

In August last year, while competing at the World Championships in Hungary, he caused a stir by taking a pop at US basketball.

He said: “You know the thing that hurts me the most is that I have to watch the NBA Finals and they have ‘world champion’ on their head.

“World champion of what? The United States?

“Don’t get me wrong. I love the US at times but that ain’t the world.

“We are the world. We have almost every country out here fighting, thriving, putting on their flag to show that they are represented. There ain’t no flags in the NBA.”

That comment will attract a hearty ‘hear, hear’ across the pond, where we’ve long been asking how baseball’s ‘World Series’ is only ever  contested by American teams. And possibly Canadians although we’re not too sure about the pinstriped rounders.

But to be fair to the old Septic Tanks, at least they have four big sports — basketball, baseball, American football and ice hockey — in which the Canadians definitely join in.

In Britain every sport other than football is now a minority sport.

And this is why the Olympics bring such blessed relief. It is a wonderful fortnight in  which 30 or more other sports are enjoyed and embraced.

Here in Paris, it’s heartening to hear the folks back home waxing lyrical about triathlon and fencing and badminton and table tennis — a sport played so rapidly at the highest level that you doubt whether there is actually even a ball.

I feel glad to have come from the Grandstand generation, when kids would  marvel at a succession of different sports on Saturday afternoons in that great sporting magazine show fronted by the likes of Des Lynam.

Before the vidiprinter churned out the football results, rallying was followed by rugby league, was followed by domestic swimming meets.

Anyone in their 40s or 50s can tell you Wigan were very good at rugby league and swimming.

And they’d share the sentiments of the indie geniuses Half Man Half Biscuit who told us that “the wonderful dexterity of Hannu Mikkola makes me want to shake hands with the whole of Finland”.

Misty, water-coloured memories of the way we were when, back in the 1980s, our most famous sportsmen were Ian Botham, Daley Thompson, Seb Coe, Steve Davis and Nick Faldo, with barely a footballer to rank anywhere close.

And the keenest worldwide rivalries weren’t Messi v Ronaldo but Borg v McEnroe, then Senna v Prost.

Last week we asked ‘Is Andy Murray Britain’s greatest ever sportsman?’ as he took his final bow after an extraordinary career.

But while there’s no future in nostalgia, those of us who remember Jocky Wilson sinking pints and smoking fags at the oche will doubt if  Murray was even Scotland’s greatest ever athlete.

Now, despite the supposed endlessness of the internet and a multitude of TV stations, we exist in a sporting monoculture where football dominates, smothering the life out of everything else.

Even though these last two decades — and not the 1980s — have been a golden era for the British Olympic movement, most of our Olympians, even our dozens of medallists, will sink back into obscurity for another four years or perhaps forever.

Participation levels in Olympic sports will increase around now and hopefully many kids will be sufficiently inspired to take up gymnastics or canoe slalom or three-day eventing and stick with them to end up as future Olympians.

But ten days from now, Manchester United will play Fulham and another nine months of the Premier League will swallow us up, with Tom Pidcock and Alex Yee and Bryony Page largely forgotten.

Lyles will be famous, perhaps almost as famous as Usain Bolt, and he might even have a ‘sneaker’ named after him.

But while we might bristle at the brashness of the rapidest man on the planet, we should salute him for talking up the joys of globalisation and of wide-ranging sporting interests.

Plenty of people sneer about the idea of diversity but Grandstand was a kind of diversity we could all cherish. Lyles would have loved it.

He’d have probably enjoyed turning over to watch Dickie Davies hosting World of Sport and marvelling at Big Daddy and Giant Haystacks and horse racing’s ITV Seven as well.

The world of sport is a wonderful, eclectic thing. And the Olympic Games is the showcase which reminds us as much.

Lyles’ timepiece was created to salute the Omega Speedmaster’s appearance on the Apollo 8 mission of December 1968.

The spacecraft blasted off from a Saturn V rocket to become the first manned vessel to leave Earth’s gravity.

And during its voyage it also completed a landmark “return trip” to the moon, although it was Apollo 13 eight months later that made the first “outward” landing.

In sporting terms, Lyles now has the world at his feet.

But he has the moon on his arm.

And inscribed on the back of his appropriately-named Speedmaster watch are words to stir history: “APOLLO 8, DEC 1968” … “DARK SIDE OF THE MOON”… and “WE’LL SEE YOU ON THE OTHER SIDE”.

Also etched on the model is “CO-AXIAL MASTER CHRONOMETER” – but that’s more one for timepiece connoisseurs than appreciators of exhilarating achievements, such as by Apollo 8 and now Lyles himself.

However, his necklace, has more of a mystery past.

Lyles has revealed little in public but entertainment outlet comingsoon speculated it might be custom made by Florida-based “The Village Jeweler”.

That’s mainly based on a 2021 Facebook post in which his his home-town Gainsville company showed Lyles “wearing a ring with rose gold accents and gemstones representing the Olympic rings”.

It was also three years ago when he told GQ he’d bought a custom rose gold and diamond Cuban link necklace from the same jeweller.

Now the six-time world champion aims to sparkle again – in the Olympics‘ 200m, where he launched his bid smoothly with victory in the first round.

As you might say, especially bearing in mind his special timepiece commemorating exiting the Earth’s atmosphere – Watch This Space!