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London, England, July 19th 2025: Letsile Tebogo of Botswana, Noah Lyles of United States, Oblique Seville of Jamaica compete in the Men s 100m during the 2025 Novuna London Athletics Meet at London Stadium in London, England Alexander Canillas/SPP PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxBRAxMEX Copyright: xAlexanderxCanillas/SPPx spp-en-AlCa-9U2A8909

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London, England, July 19th 2025: Letsile Tebogo of Botswana, Noah Lyles of United States, Oblique Seville of Jamaica compete in the Men s 100m during the 2025 Novuna London Athletics Meet at London Stadium in London, England Alexander Canillas/SPP PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxBRAxMEX Copyright: xAlexanderxCanillas/SPPx spp-en-AlCa-9U2A8909
They are two of the most electric sprinters on the planet. Botswana’s Olympic 200m champion, Letsile Tebogo, and American showman Noah Lyles have built a modern, must-watch track and field rivalry that mixes contrasting styles (Tebogo’s explosive bend and race-start vs Lyles’ supreme top-end speed and killer finish) with dramatic outcomes on the biggest stages. Their rivalry could well become one for the ages. So, what makes their on-track feud so compelling?
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Head-to-Head Record: How Do Letsile Tebogo and Noah Lyles Compare?
The rivalry’s story is simple on paper: Lyles has won the majority of their meetings, while Tebogo’s signature upset remains his gold in the 200m at Paris 2024. They’ve met repeatedly in finals at World Championships, the Olympics, and Diamond League stops, and every meeting has added a new chapter to their nail-biting contention. Below are some of their standout gatherings:
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World Championships – 100m (Budapest) | 20 Aug 2023 | Noah Lyles | 9.83 (WL) | Letsile Tebogo 9.88 (silver) |
World Championships – 200m (Budapest) | 25 Aug 2023 | Noah Lyles | 19.52 | Letsile Tebogo 19.81 (bronze) |
Olympic Games – 200m (Paris) | 8 Aug 2024 | Letsile Tebogo | 19.46 (AR) | Kenneth Bednarek 19.62; Noah Lyles 19.70 (bronze) |
Diamond League – Monaco (Herculis) | 11 Jul 2025 | Noah Lyles | 19.88 | Tebogo close: 19.97 |
Diamond League Final – Zurich | 28 Aug 2025 | Noah Lyles | 19.74 | Tebogo 0.02 back (≈19.76): A razor-thin finish |
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They’ve also crossed paths in heats/other meets. Different trackers count meetings slightly differently, but most pundits and fans would agree: Lyles has dominated the head-to-head while Tebogo has that one huge win at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Who is faster? Breaking down sprint speed and acceleration
Numbers first. In 2025, Noah Lyles produced a world-leading 200m of 19.63 (U.S. Championships/Trials), while Letsile Tebogo’s best of the 2025 season was 19.76 at the Prefontaine Classic (Eugene) – a clocking that at the time stood as the world lead. Those two season marks set the tone for their rematches through the summer.
Noah Lyles | 19.63 (US Trials / Eugene — 3 Aug 2025) | World-leading at US Championships; showed top-end form. |
Letsile Tebogo | 19.76 (Prefontaine Classic, 5 Jul 2025) | World lead at Prefontaine; excellent bend/drive phase. |
What’s your perspective on:
Can Tebogo's explosive start outshine Lyles' legendary finish in their next epic showdown?
Have an interesting take?
Beyond raw times, the rivalry is enticing because their strengths complement each other. Tebogo is famous for an explosive, technically tidy start and an aggressive bend: He builds a lead through the curve and forces rivals to run him down. Lyles, on the other hand, is a master of mid-race top speed and the home-straight surge. He often runs through opponents from 120m to 160m onwards. That contrast is the reason many of their finishes are decided in the last 20 metres.
Career Records and Personal Bests in the 100m & 200m
Both athletes have already etched elite all-time numbers into the record books. World Athletics maintains the canonical PBs:
Letsile Tebogo | 9.86 (+1.0 m/s) — Paris, 4 Aug 2024 | 19.46 — Paris (Olympics), 8 Aug 2024 (African Record) |
Noah Lyles | 9.79 (+1.0 m/s) — Paris, 4 Aug 2024 (PB at the Olympics) | 19.31 (+0.4 m/s) — Eugene, 21 Jul 2022 (one of the fastest 200m marks ever) |
Those PBs tell the headline story: Lyles’ 19.31 is historic (third-fastest all-time), while Tebogo’s Paris double (sub-9.9 in the 100 and a 19.46 Olympic 200) marked a rapid arrival into the elite sprint conversation.
Strengths and Weaknesses of Letsile Tebogo vs Noah Lyles
Letsile Tebogo – Strengths
Explosive start and excellent drive phase off the blocks; bends extremely well.
Big-race temperament: Paris 2024 gold shows he can peak on the night when it matters.
Young and still improving: His PBs came recently, so his trajectory favors more gains.

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Letsile Tebogo – Weaknesses
Small margins: If he is edged at the 100-150m mark, he must hold off Lyles’ top-end. That’s a lot to ask.
Occasional mid-season rest/injury management has disrupted race rhythm (the 2025 season had a few starts/pauses).
Noah Lyles – Strengths
Exceptional top-end speed and race-closing ability: He times his run-throughs with surgical precision.
Huge finals experience (Worlds, Diamond League, Olympics): The tactical intelligence in Lyle’s game shows in close finishes.
Noah Lyles – Weaknesses
Has shown vulnerability when health or a poor start costs him curve-position: As in Paris 2024’s 200m, where illness hampered his finish.
The showmanship that fans love occasionally draws penalties/warnings or distracts rhythm.
Who has the edge in the 200m showdown at the 2025 Tokyo World Championships?
Short answer: Lyles arrives with a slight edge on paper, but Tebogo is the one to watch.
Why Noah Lyles has the edge: across 2023 to 2025, he has the deeper finals record and multiple high-quality wins (Worlds, Diamond League finals), and the 2025 season best of 19.63 underscores his form going into Tokyo. Several experts list Lyles as the marginal favorite because he’s beaten Tebogo more often and has a proven late-race kick.
Why Tebogo can upset: Tebogo’s Olympic 19.46 is not a one-off. Instead, it shows he can execute a perfect curve/start and hang on. If the young gun produces a fast first 120m (or if lane draws give Tebogo the inside bend advantage), he can force Lyles into recovery mode rather than allowing the American to run him down. Tokyo’s previews flag this matchup as a genuine toss-up if both are at their best.

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So the safe (and exciting) prediction: Lyles is the slight favorite, while Tebogo is the biggest single-race threat. Expect a finish decided in the last 10–20 metres.
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Fans love contrasts: Tebogo’s composed, technical curve and the underdog arc of carrying Botswana to historic gold; Lyles’ charisma, unbeaten Diamond League resume, and devastating top speed. Put them on the same start line, and you get drama and historically close finishes. Expect more chapters through the end of 2025 (Tokyo Worlds) and beyond.
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Can Tebogo's explosive start outshine Lyles' legendary finish in their next epic showdown?