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Home 2023 World Athletics Championships

As the outdoor season gets into full swing, the battle for the fastest man in the world this year gets tougher!

Deji OgeyingbobyDeji Ogeyingbo
March 25, 2023
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Oregon 22 World Athletics Champs, Day 2: Gidey wins a dramatic women 10,000m final

The Men's 100 meters, Fred Kerley takes the win! World Athletics Championships Eugene, Oregon, USA July15-26, 2022 100 meter final, Kerley, USA, photo by Kevin Morris

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Deji Ogeyingbo is completely right! The Men’s 100 meters, in 2023, is completely open, and that should make for a spectacular year of sprinting! 

As the outdoor season gets into full swing, the battle for the fastest man in the world this year gets tougher.

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As the outdoor season gets into full swing, the battle for the fastest man in the world this year gets tougher
. The battle of the fastest man on the planet. It’s the most coveted crown in the whole of Track and Field. Who comes out of a major championship with the gold medal and probably the fastest time amongst his opponents? And very often-as, it should, the price to pay for such a mantle is extreme work and discipline in order for an athlete to build oneself for those 10 seconds races.

Christian Coleman, 2022 USATF Indoors, The Podium, photo by Kevin Morris

For most of the 100m finals in history, the gong has always been worn by a Jamaican or an American, with a few exceptions in between. Usain Bolt wore it longer and more times than any Sprinter in history, and as we have come to see amongst faithful and non-faithful of the sports, the Jamaican is always referred to as the fastest man in history.

Marcell Jacobs defeats Christian Coleman, Marvin Bracy, 2022 World Indoor Champs, Belgrade, Serbia, March 2022, photo by Getty Images for World Athletics

Six years into Bolt’s retirement, not one sprinter has struggled to hold down the title. There have been three major championships in that time frame, including the Olympics, and we’ve had three different winners. Christian Coleman at the 2019 World Championships in Doha, Marcel Jacobs at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, and Fred Kerley at the 2022 World Championships in Oregon.

Fred Kerley wins the 2022 WA Outdoor champs 100 meters, July 16, 2022, photo by Getty Images for World Athletics.

No single one of them has been consistent enough to dominate beyond that time frame of their success. There is an argument that it’s no fault of theirs, but Bolt wasn’t flawless himself; he had to overcome his own travails too. We’ve seen an increase in the number of sprinters who are challenging for top honors in the last twelve months, making it difficult to access the leading candidate ahead of the world championships in Budapest this summer.

Fred Kerley, 100m,
World Athletics Championships
Eugene, Oregon, USA
July15-26, 2022
100 meters qualifying, photo by Kevin Morris

First off, you can’t look past the defending champion, Kerley. Amongst the frontrunners, he is the least candidate fans would have envisaged to lead the pack, but after his win in Oregon last year, the American had thrown the cats amongst the pigeons. 9.76 was his Season and Personal Best from 2022 as he was closely followed by his American compatriots Treyvon Bromell (9.81) and Marvin Bracy (9.85), with Kenya’s Ferdinand Omanyala sandwiched between them with 9.85 also.

Fred Kerley takes 200m win at #MauriePlantmeeting, photos courtesy of MauriePlantMeeting23/ContinentalTourGold

Kerley skipped the indoor season to race in some continental tour meets in Australia, and as we anticipated, he only competed in the 200m and 400m, races he won convincingly. It really doesn’t tell us much as to what sort of shape he is, and it’s maybe good to keep the fans salivating, but somewhere in his mind while racing down under in Australia, he would have kept more than an eye on his opponent’s performances indoors.
2022 didn’t see sprinters run many fast times, with only 30 runners clocking sub-10s, with five of the running 9.99s. Kerley was the only athlete to run inside 9.8s. He did it twice. This invariably meant that there was a growing list of sprinters willing to challenge the top prize as there wasn’t an exact stranglehold at the top.

Noah Lyles,
New Balance Indoor Grand Prix Track & Field
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
February 3, 2023
World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold meeting, photo by Kevin Morris

This brings us to 2023, and the competition gets tougher. Many sprinters have either thrown their hat in the ring with their performance in the indoor season, or the burgeoning ones from last year have gotten better. The roll call is growing by the day, and there is a plausibility that we might get a new champion this year.

Noah Lyles, in his Gucci/adidas colab, enters his place of business, photo by Kevin Morris

World 200m Champion Noah Lyles’ indoor season was a success over the 60m, one that saw him improve on his Personal Best in the event to 6.51s. Crucially, it seems he’s made a massive revamp on his poor start, one that usually hampers him at the start of the shorter sprint.

Trayvon Bromell, Noah Lyles, New Balance Indoor Grand Prix Track & Field
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
February 3, 2023
World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold meeting, photo by Kevin Morris

Alongside Lyles is Bromell, who has had a brilliant start to his 2023 season as he sets his sight on upgrading his Bronze from last year to match his Personal Best of 9.76s. The American looks reborn after shaking off what was a career-threatening injury. Marvin Bracy, the Oregon Silver medalist, hasn’t gotten into full stride yet, but he’s certainly not a pushover.

Trayvon Bromell takes the Men’s 100m in Silesia, photo by Diamond League AG

Also, the 2019 World Champion, Christian Coleman, looks to be getting past first gear after he returned from a doping ban last year. The 60m world indoor record holder ran a season’s best of 9.87s last. So far, he’s gotten in the 6.4s zone indoors, indicating that his body is getting back into great shape in the summer. World 400m champion Michael Norman has also thrown his hat into the ring.

Christian Coleman, 2022 USATF Indoor, Spokane, WA, photo by Kevin Morris

Outside the US, many sprinters are looking to wrestle this title out of their hands. Top of the list is Olympic champion Jacobs. After the Italian beat Coleman to the world indoor title in Belgrade last year, he suffered a dip in form largely because of injury. His return this year hasn’t been spectacular, as he came out crocked. No doubt, the quality is still there, and if he gets back to full fitness, there will be no stopping him.

Ferdinand Omanyala defeats Marcell Jacobs over 60m, Lievin, photo by Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais
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Africa and Commonwealth Games Champion Ferdinand Omanyala has started the season like a house on fire. World Athletics did not ratify a series of 9.8s runs in Nairobi, but it doesn’t change the fact that when he is in the mood, he can eat with the big boys. The man he dethroned to win his crown, Akani Simbine, looks wounded. Revenge is in the works for him, having made the final of major competitions since 2016.

Ferdinand Omanyala and Akani Simbine, African Champs, photo by Deji Ogeyingbo

The younger generation of sprinters seems to be catching up fast. Jamaica’s latest sensation Oblique Seville reached the final of last year’s world championships, and he’s getting better by the day.

Letsile Tebogo, Botswana, 100m gold, photo by Marta Gorczynska for World Athletics

The 22-year-old is trained by the famous Glen Mills, the same man that turned Bolt into a superstar. There is also the world junior champion from Botswana, Letsile Tebogo, who seems to be conjuring his inner Bolt and might just spring up a surprise.


Regardless of whatever happens this year, we are in for a thrill in the men’s 100m.

Author

  • Deji Ogeyingbo
    Deji Ogeyingbo

    Deji Ogeyingbo is one of Nigeria’s leading Track and Field Journalists as he has worked in various capacities as a writer, content creator, and reporter for radio and TV stations in the country and Africa. Deji has covered varying degrees of Sporting competitions within and outside Nigeria which includes, African Championships and World Junior Championships. Also, he founded one of Nigeria’s leading Sports PR and Branding company in Nikau Sports in 2020, a company that aims to change the narrative of how athletes are perceived in Nigeria while looking to grow their image to the highest possible level.

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Deji Ogeyingbo

Deji Ogeyingbo

Deji Ogeyingbo is one of Nigeria’s leading Track and Field Journalists as he has worked in various capacities as a writer, content creator, and reporter for radio and TV stations in the country and Africa. Deji has covered varying degrees of Sporting competitions within and outside Nigeria which includes, African Championships and World Junior Championships. Also, he founded one of Nigeria’s leading Sports PR and Branding company in Nikau Sports in 2020, a company that aims to change the narrative of how athletes are perceived in Nigeria while looking to grow their image to the highest possible level.

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