Club Shay Shay - Nightcap - Hour 1: Noah Lyles joins the show
Episode Date: August 18, 2024Shannon Sharpe and Chad "Ochocinco" Johnson are joined by USA sprinter Noah Lyles to break down his 100-meter gold and 200-meter bronze at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Noah also discusses his contractual ...issues between himself and adidas, resulting in Lyles not attending an Anthony Edwards shoe release party. Later, Noah reacts to Tyreek Hill's comments about a potential race between the two.03:40 - Show Starts04:44 - Noah Lyles Joins the show(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements.)#Volume #ClubSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Last minute tickets, lowest price guaranteed. Hello, ladies and gentlemen and thank you for joining us for another episode of nightcap i
am your favorite of shannon sharp he's your favorite number 85 the rock runner extraordinaire
the bingo ring of fame artery the pro bowler the all pro the legendary you know from samuel juco
the oregon state all the way to the bingos where he made a
name for himself and from liberty city that's chad ocho cinco johnson but you can call him ocho
please make sure you hit that like button please make sure you hit that subscribe button
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company, 84. The link is pinned at the top of the chat. And guys, with no further ado, we got no more
introductions to make. Here he is, the current world's fastest man, Olympic gold medalist in the
100 meters. He's a three-time 200-meter champ at the World Championship. He anchored the world,
the gold medal winning team
in the world championship last year here he is ladies and gentlemen no allows no how you doing
bro feeling good feeling good what's popping i'm good let's get right into it that race
leading into it uh you ran your fastest time, the Diamond League meet. I think you ran 9.81.
You know, Kashane Thompson has run 9.77,
and everybody's talking.
That's the man to beat.
That's the man to beat.
And you had never run sub 9.8.
To run it in the finals,
when you absolutely had to have it,
tell me what was your strategy going into that race,
and how were you able to pull it off?
To be honest, I had many strategies.
They all kind of, you know, were thrown out the window.
The closer and closer we got to the finals.
The line.
You know, in the first round, I'm like, okay, you know, I'm going to work on my first 60.
I'm going to get out.
But, you know, I have ADD.
So my brain is working on overdrive. It's like, well, we could, we could get out easy and then hit it hard or we can get a heart and
then shut it down. Or we can run fast all the way. And the problem was I thought too much.
And then I underestimated my competition. It's like, no, see, now you had to, you messed up.
I'm like, all right, all right. I need to calm my brain down. I needed to get it set on one goal.
So we get to the semifinals. Now I'm like, all right, all right. I need to calm my brain down. I need to get it set on one goal. So we get to the semifinals. Now I'm like, all right, aggression, mindset, power, everything like that.
And it produced, you know, a really good time. Ninety three.
You know, it tied again my second fastest time, which was my PR before London.
So I'm like, all right, you know, I'm good. I'm good. But, you know, I feel I can go even faster.
You know, I didn't want to get beat. You beat. So here I am getting second in the semis.
I'm like, what's going on?
So my therapist calls me and she's like,
you're running with aggression.
You're running with a Noah that is not you.
And I'm like, okay, fair enough.
That's not me.
That's an older way of thinking.
That's just not how I run.
It's like, you need to run free.
You need to run with no pressure. Just go out there and run. And and run and i'm like all right cool that's what i'm gonna do
i'm gonna go out there and i'm gonna just run and i'm she said if you control the crowd you control
the race and i know i'm like well shoot that's that's how i do i'm gonna show me that's what i
do you know if that's all it takes i'm gonna win the race but we get you know we're getting out
there i'm just like just be me just be me just be me, just be me, just be me.
We get out there and, you know, they're doing the intros and, you know,
because Shane comes out and because Shane, he ends up yelling.
And I'm like, oh, hold on.
That's me.
But I didn't hold him for it.
I liked it, though, because I love to see more personalities come up than just
look at the camera, say hi, walk out. It's like, no, no, bring that energy.
Like get me excited to run. So, you know,
there's another YouTube video that NBC put out where it's like,
you can see us in the back of the car, you know, Fred on the side, you know,
banging on the wall. It's like, let's go. You know,
cause Shane's doing his, his yelling. I'm over here singing dreams and nightmares.
I'm like, yeah, this, this is an Olympic final. This is an Olympic final. So, you know, I'll go out, I'm jumping around, I'm running past the cameras,
I'm yelling at the crowd and they over here, like, yeah, excited. I'm like, yeah, this is my race
now. And, you know, from that point on, it was just repeating, you know, you know, God got me,
God got me, God got me. Cause at this point I've done everything that I need to do to win this
race. Everything that I needed to do has been done in months in advance you know we're already here now it's just a believing in myself
that it's going to get done and it's not about running fast times it's about running to win
the times will come when you run to win
so you go out there and your reaction time isn't bad because normally you're like your reaction time is a little slow.
But I think, you know, I really can't spot as Justin Gatlin says, nine, eight can't catch nine, eight if you give up too much cushion.
So your reaction time wasn't that much behind him.
I think he was zero point one, seven, six.
And I think you were zero point one, seven, eight.
And so so you're really close but you know
you got the top end you got 400 meter strength you got 200 meter strength yeah so you've had to
feel good if i'm close to this joker at 50 60 meters i can get home yeah i knew i knew i had
a good lane when i saw oblique seville was going to be next to me. I'm like, this is the guy who's been beating me.
He's beat me twice already.
I know his strengths.
I know where he's going to try and go on me.
And the problem I feel is every time that's happened, I've been too many lanes away to see when he makes that move.
So I'm like, now that I got you right next to me, I know when you're going to make your move.
And I know I'm going to make it as soon as you make yours.
And, you know, thankful he was there for that. And I was able, now that I got you right next to me, I know when you're going to make your move. And I know I'm going to make it as soon as you make yours. And, you know, thankful he was there for that.
And I was able to do that.
And a lot of people get stuck on this reaction time and like, oh, he got out the block slow.
You know, I I'm a I'm a numbers guy.
I look at every 10 meter increment.
I look at five meter increments, how fast I was to this part of the race, how fast I was in this.
And at the end, in the beginning.
So when I'm looking back at the race, I'm looking at the numbers.
The numbers are actually very normal for me in the first 10 meters.
It was probably some of like, it matches some of my fastest runs.
The difference is everybody else said, I got to be better.
I got to be more.
I got to be more than I've ever been before.
And they did.
But in the end of that race, they tired themselves out. So you saw a time that was not representative of their PRs because they use so much energy trying to be that in the beginning of the race. But because I was already on par for what I normally do, I just put an extra bit on the end and it led me to running faster.
I just put an extra bit on the end and it led me to running faster.
You know, it's so funny when I sit here and think about it, when I think about running 100 meters, right?
The margin of error is so small.
You can't make any mistakes.
And if you do, if you do make a mistake, whether it be in the start or depending on what phase of the race you do make that mistake in, the chances of coming back since everybody is so fast and the race is so short obviously only being nine seconds how do you process the race when you have so many different
runners against you are you racing more so against them are you more so racing against yourself
from a strategic standpoint yeah it's a patient race it's it's very patient a lot of people think
you know you just gas it from the get-go you You can't do that. You know, there are many runners who are specialists in the 60 and then they come to the 100 and it's not always as representative. You don't see a transition, you know, to the 100 and even to the 200.
to answer your question on terms of athletes, you know, there, there's a confidence in yourself knowing that no matter who you race, you're going to still do what you've been doing in practice,
but there's also a confidence in yourself that says, I love to compete. And when somebody pulls
on me, pulls up on me or somebody gets out on me, I'm okay. So it's, it's, it's a confidence thing.
You know, if you panic in that moment, it doesn't matter if you're racing the
competitors or if you're saying,
oh, I had a bad reaction
time. I'm out of the race.
It's the confidence to say, I'm going to get
myself back into the race or hold on.
It's okay. I'm going to reel
them back in. I'm going to catch them.
Give me a few meters.
Don't tighten up, but I'm
going to get to you.
Let me ask few minutes. Don't tighten up. But I'm going to get to you. It's that.
No, let me ask you this.
I was hoping that you and Kashain was next to each other because, like I said, I had we had Justin Gatlin on here and we had Michael Johnson on before this race took place.
And I said, the problem that I have is that he has never been on the global stage.
I said, I understand the nine seven seven at the trials, but the Olympics and the world stage is something
different. I say, if somebody can make
him run the full 100 meters,
we'll see if he can still hold
that form when he's letting up
at 80 meters. I think Big Fred
being next to him,
put him under the gun.
He applied pressure from the
beginning all the way to the end.
And if you look at his last 88, like 15, 20 meters, that forearm started to break.
And that was your that was the door that you needed to open just enough for you to put a foot in and get eventually get to get your torso to the line.
No, I agree. It's very accurate.
And another point to that is, you know, a lot of people is like, oh, because Shane ran this time slowing down, slowing down, slowing down.
And yes, it's very impressive that you ran those times slowing down.
But unfortunately, you never took your body to running full speed.
So when now you need it at the end, it's a new it's a new world.
And unfortunately, you don't want to put yourself
in a new world position in the Olympic final.
But I do agree 100%.
Putting pressure on it, Fred putting pressure on him,
definitely was a bonus to me.
Go ahead, Ojo, go ahead.
Get your question here.
To piggyback off one of the key words that you said,
obviously being on an Olympic stage,
represent your
country 100 meters in paris now you have experience running in big meets you have experience being on
the big stage does the pressure really affect you that much and if it does affect you what ways are
you able to dodge it and suppress that pressure to be able to go out there and run the race that
you need to the way that i view crowds and pressure you know my coach said something that i felt like really got to me he
said pressure can work in one of two ways it can either boost you by 20 or it can tear you down by
20 yeah you decide how you want that 20 to go if. If you say, this is my opportunity, this is my moment,
this was made for me, that's a boost 20%. If you're going in saying, shoot, I've never raced
these guys before. I don't know if I can do this. This is uncharted territory. What if I'm not
prepared? A bunch of what ifs, what ifs, what ifs, that's 20% less than you're going to
underperforming.
You know, that's not the mindset you want going into that.
And that's how I view competing.
Every time I get to a big stage, I believe that this is a moment that God has prepared
for me.
You know, I put in the work in the natural.
You know, I'm going to believe that God put in the super and together we're going to create
the supernatural. Yeah, I like it. Okay. Let's transition. You win the goal. You said that's what you wanted
to do. You wanted to win the goal. There haven't been a whole lot of men, Noah, that have doubled
when the hundred meter goal and the 200 meter goal in the Olympics. We know what you saying
from 08 to 16, he tripled up. Carl Lewis, he doubled up.
But it's not been a whole lot of men to win both of those races.
And so I know you got the hard part out the way.
It was supposed to be the most challenging event was going to be the 100.
You're a 200-meter specialist, kind of like Usain,
that turned yourself into a great 100-meter runner.
So now you get to the 200.
When did you start to notice something like,
damn,
I'm coming down with something.
I don't feel like Noah.
My wind isn't,
I'm not,
I'm not being able to breathe like I normally do.
To be honest,
there were now looking back,
there were signs the day of the finals of the hundred that i was like
this is taking too much energy to produce what i normally produce but i just threw it to the side
and then i wake up the next day so it's monday now after the the finals and i have a sore throat
and i'm just thinking oh okay maybe I just cheered a little
too much. Maybe I was yelling a little too much, even though I didn't really feel like I was,
I just, you know, put it off to that. Cause you know, I had a job to do.
Right. It wasn't until I woke up in the middle of the night on Tuesday morning and, um, my body is
aching. I'm chills. I'm, I'm, I got a headache. My sinuses are running. My throat is aching. I'm chills. I got a headache.
My sinuses are running.
My throat is super sore.
I'm like, oh, no.
These are all the signs I get before I get COVID.
And I said, I called up the doctor in that moment.
I said, we need to test.
We need to test now.
So you've had COVID before,
so you know the symptoms or the oncoming of it again.
Not only have I had COVID before,
for the last two years,
I have gotten COVID a
week or the week of U.S. championships
for the last two years.
Wow.
This is the first year
that I didn't show up to U.S. championships
with COVID or with
just coming out of COVID.
So I'm thinking, oh, I'm good.
I'm not catching COVID this year.
You know, it's going to be great.
Here it is again.
The worst time in the world.
But you feel good.
You're going through the round.
You feel fairly good.
I think you dropped a bogo in the semis.
Yeah.
And you, look, Noah, you ran, I think you dropped a Bogo in the semis. Yeah. And you look,
no,
you ran.
I think you ran a 1950.
I think he was in the race and he ran 1957,
but it was a nip and tuck race.
No,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no, no, no, no, no, Kenny, Kenny, I ran, gosh, I can't remember 53 race previously that you won the race. Go ahead.
Kenny, I ran,
gosh, I can't remember if it was 53 and he
ran 57 or 56. It was at
US Championships.
You raced to Bogo, so you
know he has
great,
he's 44, he's low 44
in the 400.
He's got sub 99 in the 400. He's got sub
99 in the 100.
So you know, he probably
on a good day,
he probably can go sub 19.6.
You're probably thinking
I'm probably going to need to go
sub 19.6, maybe even
19.5 in order to win
this given who's
in this race. Correct? i wasn't even thinking about that
okay because going into the meet before i went over to london i'm doing practices i'm asking
my coach what do i need to run to prove to you that i can break this world record in the 200
and he tells me the time and i do it so in my head i'm in world record shape wow so it's not about the competitors it's how well can
i run my best race okay but as soon as i get covid i'm like oh my gosh like now i'm just trying to
make sure that i get through every round now i'm i'm gonna be able to be as fit as possible you
know how i was talking about having a plan before you got to the round of 100? Yeah, I had a plan before I got to the 200.
Now my plan's out the window.
Right.
You threw it out.
I threw it out, yeah.
Right now, I'm just trying to get as healthy as possible.
They put me on the medication, the COVID medication, and that stuff is amazing.
I'll tell you, it supposedly gets rid of most of the symptoms, and it shortens the time period that you actually
have COVID. Um, that stuff is amazing, but of course still, you know, having asthma,
it has an effect. So I'm just trying to go through, you know, warmups, trying to get as
normal as possible each round. But, um, and in my head, I'm just, and I'm trying to just throw
away any negative thought that I have again, keeping that confidence in the idea of I'm trying to just throw away any negative thought that I have. Again, keeping that confidence in the idea of I'm going to go into this,
believing that I'm in the best shape of my life.
I like that.
This is really dope and really fascinating.
I mean, obviously for me, in listening to how you guys transition,
like when you think about the 200 meters, you think about the 100 meters.
So your 200 meter race, to me, I would think is a strategy and it makes your speed and endurance is is there a way you can break down
the approach you take as opposed to the 100 meter and the way you approach the 200 meter when it
comes to strategy yeah i'd say the the in the hundred you know the way that me and my coach
break it down is first to 60 and then you know that that
and then my top end speed will hit around 80 meters right and then i'm just holding positions
if i try to run any faster after 80 meters you know i'm likely to start breaking down
in the 200 it i feel that it's a constant building up. I'm constantly just building up speed,
building up speed,
building up speed.
I'm very conscious of where I'm positionally in the lane.
I want to be in the middle of the lane to middle outside.
And then when I come from the turn to the straight,
I moved straight to the middle or middle inside and slingshot.
And off of that,
you can relate it to NASCAR.
You know, they go up wide.
Slingshotting.
And come down.
Right, right, right.
Very similar in the 200.
Using that speed.
And then, you know,
just maintaining, you know,
upright running positions.
You know, after a while
when you've run it so many times
and you are striking the ground
with straight legs
directly underneath your hips,
it's easy to run fast. It just feels like you're on a skateboard and you're just kicking ground with straight legs directly underneath your hips, it's easy to run fast.
It just feels like you're on a skateboard and you're just kicking, pushing it along.
That's the mindset that I kind of have as I'm running.
The 200 specifically, because it's just momentum building and building and building.
You don't really want it to slow down.
Unfortunately, that was not the strategy that i went in with
in this 200 because i felt that throughout the whole rounds i had to constantly build up my
energy just so i can get to baseline noah by the time i got to the finals i'm like if i don't
bring out the energy that i normally do i don't think my body would react in the same way.
I got to get it back to baseline so we can give myself a fighting chance in the whole race.
Hey there, it's Michael Lewis, author of Going Infinite, Moneyball, The Blind Side,
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This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, I am joined by the greatest alpine
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Michaela talks about the ski accident that changed everything for her,
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Like, I have no right
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I really probably
shouldn't even be doing it,
but I'm here,
so I will win.
Listen to this episode
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Is there a preference of Lane?
Because I didn't think you, look,
I didn't think you wanted Kenny Benerick that far outside
and Tobogo that far outside of you.
Is there, I mean, a lot of people like lane 6-7, 5-6-7.
I think you were in lane 4.
So what's your lane preference,
given if Noah Lyles is 100% healthy,
if training has been great leading up to the meet,
what's your lane preference?
Six or seven.
Okay.
I've had my fastest times at six and seven.
I can do damage in anything from four to eight.
After once,
once you go below four,
it's,
it gets real difficult.
That turn is,
gets really tight.
And the way that you have to position your body is it,
it,
it drains the body to get around the turn so that you can give yourself a fighting chance on the second hundred.
Yeah, that's a really tight turn when you're on the inside lanes.
You really, you got to be hugging that inside lane.
What's crazy is Michael Johnson broke the world record in lane three.
Because that used to be technically a preferred lane.
I don't know how he did that.
Because I've run in lane three quite a few times.
That is not a preferred lane, in my opinion.
You know, the lady that broke the Madarina Coke,
she broke the world record in lane two in the 400 meters. Yeah, I know.
I know.
But I ain't going to talk about that.
Yeah, there was some testing going on, state funding.
We'll talk about that offline.
So, okay, you got COVID,
and everybody seemed to be making light of the situation that you're like,
I need water, I need to get.
So, you're like, did you ever think about pulling out the race?
I'm surprised that you raised because normally COVID you get COVID.
We can't have you contaminate anybody else.
Did the officials say, no, we got to quarantine you for 24 hours.
You might not be able to race.
Was that ever a conversation?
Yeah, that was a conversation.
While I was getting tested, I was talking with the Team USA doctors, and they were telling me what the rules are.
They changed them from Tokyo.
They said that anybody who has COVID is allowed to compete.
It's up to the governing body of their sport or their country to decide how they want to handle the COVID situation.
So, you know, I'm, I'm just letting you know,
there were a lot of people in the village who had COVID, you know,
that just didn't say,
I'm just the most popular person who got COVID and actually said I had it.
And because of that, it started, you know,
it serves up a lot of controversy in itself, but you know,
I've, as soon as I heard i got covid and i was able to
compete i said i'm going to try you know i i'm i'm not promised tomorrow so i'm gonna take advantage
of what i have today and if it's so if it's so be it that i'm not strong enough to make it through
the rounds then i'm you know i wasn't i wasn't able to do it. But the fact that I was able to get to the finals
and still grab bronze, I was like
that's a medal that I could have easily
just said, no, I got the gold. I'm good.
No. No, I'm here now.
I fought for this for four years. I trained
for this for four years. Why not take the opportunity?
Obviously, you know
that you know the mythical number that's out there 1919 you've taken down
the american record held by michael johnson um he broke that record in 1996 at the olympics
actually he broke it at the trials of 1966 the 1979 uh a record so he's went i mean what 1972
was the world record if i'm not not mistaken, Noah, in 79.
But it was at altitude. Michael broke it
at sea level in Atlanta. So you
know, you're going to have to have
the perfect race. It's going to have to be
the perfect surface, and it's going to have to be
the perfect, you're going to get the perfect lane,
and you're going to have to have
the perfect competitors.
Everything's going to have to be perfect, Noah.
No, yeah.
But that doesn't mean it can't happen.
You know, I mean, I'm very aware of that.
But I'll be ready on the day, you know.
I can't be ready on every day.
I try to be as ready as possible.
And that's, you know, what I strive for.
You know, I know that perfection is never a thing that you can actually obtain.
But on my journey for perfection, I can obtain history.
I like it.
Speaking of that journey and where you are right now at the top of your game, the best, the fastest in the world at what you do.
Many would view you in a way that most would see, obviously, the villain.
would view you in a way that most would see obviously the villain in a sense you know you know being at the top people taking shots at you you being uh somewhat brash and confident in the
way you carry yourself and the way you do your job and that that is okay do you embrace being
the villain in in in some sort of way and and and enjoy and enjoy some of the, the, the banter back and forth,
or I'm just curious how you feel about it because,
you know,
you always hear some of the things from other athletes saying stuff and,
uh,
you fire back.
I mean,
how do you take it personally?
Do you,
do you enjoy it?
Do you like it?
And just before you answer,
like for me,
myself as a villain,
myself,
I love being in that spot.
I like it.
I like people talking about me i
like the trash talk back and forth i'm just curious how do you how do you feel about it
i have a mixed view on it in the sport itself if we're talking about straight running you're better
than me i'm better than you i don't have a problem with it i love it you know i love the banter i
love the energy i love going back and forth i don't have a problem with that at all. That's what I love to see.
That's what gets everybody excited.
Now, when people lie on my name outside the sport, that's when I draw issues and draw lines.
But unfortunately, I can't control that.
You know, I can only do my best.
But, you know, I'm very aware that people are going to want to hear what they want to hear.
And some people are going to take things different ways. And that's just how we are as humans.
You know, everybody has their difference of opinions. Unfortunately, that is where I, you know, I got to say I got to remind myself of that.
You know, OK, the haters are going to hear what they want to hear. But the people who support me, they're going to want to hear what they hear as well.
me they're going to want to hear what they hear as well and at the same time i see so many people who are affected by what i do in a positive light that i'm like okay you know this this makes me
feel good you know it's very comforting to see that and uh and know that you know i'm changing
sport you know i'm trying to move forward as much as possible uh in terms of being the villain and being the hero, I see myself as an anti-hero.
Sometimes you got to get your hands dirty and sometimes, you know, you got to try and
shoot for the stars.
But we're not perfect.
I mean, we're human, you know?
Yeah.
We make mistakes.
You know, and we try to do better.
You know, I would hope we try to do better.
But yeah, I mean, one of my, I feel biggest strengths is, you know i would hope we try to do better um but yeah i mean one of my i feel biggest
strengths is you know i listen to the people around me and when i mess up i try to correct
those wrongs and do the best and do better next time yeah one thing i can say is when you reach
for the stars and you get your hand dirty and you combine the two you combine the two, you combine the two,
it creates someone extraordinary.
From one to another,
keep doing it the way you're doing it
and keep making noise.
I appreciate it, man. I appreciate it.
No, I think you got a lot of pushback.
You run the world championship last year
and unprompted,
you said you see these hats
and they have world champions on it, which we've
always called the basketball players. We've always
called the NBA, the NFL,
the Super Bowl champ. We've always called
MLB. We've always called them world champs.
And I think that's where
a lot of the blowbacks, because it seems like
one of America's best athletes
was taking a shot
at some of America's
best athletes.
And I think it kind of put you under the hour because then, you know,
basketball players said what they said.
Some football players chimed in also.
And then for the first time, I actually saw some of these athletes
like openly rooting against you.
I mean, you might not.
I mean, something you would probably never see in another country.
You're not going to see the dutch somebody from dutch
rooting against femka or rooting against uh our carsten he's from norway or ingebrits we're not
gonna see that do you think you brought some of this on yourself with that comment or what were
you hoping to accomplish by making that comment i i think the last question that you asked what was i
trying to accomplish by making the comment, is the most important one.
Everybody sees the clip.
Everybody sees the thumbnail.
Everybody sees the 16 seconds.
But did anybody decide to ask, what was the question that was asked to me?
The question that was asked to me is, how do you feel knowing that when you go back to your own country, unlike these other countries that celebrate their athletes on such a humongous stage, when Taboho won his gold medal, he went back to a stadium filled with 30,000 people celebrating.
Yes.
when i showed up back home on my flight of course some people recognized me and i'm very thankful for that but there was there was no 30 000 people there was no limo driver ready to take me home
there there was no bus waiting if i i had my mom i had my pops and they were ready to take me home and i was ready
to go to bed but there was none of that right there was none of that right right but that that
the the the difference it i can understand the difference because we have a different way in
america of seeing our sports the problem that i had was you were given the title of a world champion.
The people who weren't facing the world.
That's where I drew the line and said,
that's hurtful because you already have those,
but you're giving the title to people who aren't doing that.
Nothing wrong.
Well,
they are great.
They just didn't have the title.
Is, is Nicola Jokic
one of the best players in the world
I'm going to be honest
I don't know who that is
Luka Doncic
is he not one of the
Giannis Antetokounmpo
yeah
what's the point
they're great they're great players
but they're world players.
They're not from America. And the problem that you're going to run into, Noah, is that Botswana doesn't have a whole lot of athletes to celebrate as opposed to Americans.
If you look at probably Kenya and Ethiopia and Sudan and some of these other countries, the Dutch, thewegians we got nba we got mlb we got football
we got baseball and so yeah teams they have parades nobody is getting for the most part even
michael phelps i don't know if they did they have how many people showed up at m&t i don't know if
michael phelps went eight goals i don't know if he had 30 000 show up i know they might have had a
big contingent cheering him on.
I just think the difference is, Noah,
is that in a
country like Botswana, or you're talking
about a country, he's their hero.
He is
to Botswana, he's
LeBron James. That's what he is to
Botswana. Yeah, I agree.
Usain Bolt, what he is to jamaica he's he's he's there
michael jordan yeah i agree michael jordan was chicago they showed up for the parade but but
probably when he went back to wilmington where he was from ain't no 30 000 show up for it yeah
no i agree no i agree 100 that I'm not expecting that.
I'm not expecting the parade. I'm just showing that the difference of how our sport is shown in,
because the question that was asked again was how does it feel knowing that when I go back home,
it's not with somebody like to Boho is getting when he goes home. Right.
And again, I know what it is. I know what it is. I know we have
football and basketball,
baseball, golf. Those are all
above my score. I know that. I'm cool
with that. Of course, I want to make
that better, but I understand that.
Again, the only
problem I had was you have
world champions, but you're giving
the title to people
who aren't facing the world and you're giving them the title of world champions, but you're giving the title to people who aren't facing the world
and you're giving
them the title of world champion.
That's the only thing.
Me, personally, Noah,
I think if, look,
your two biggest meets are
two biggest are the Olympics
and the world championships.
The
Diamond Leagues, yeah leagues yeah I mean if you
stream it you can see it it's not
it's not as televised as
say football or basketball or
baseball and so it's hard
for the America for the for the
cash for the cash person everybody
has a favorite team whether you know
the Cowboys fans they're
all over the place the Steelers fans the Packers
whomever.
And so it's hard when I only really get a chance to see
Noah Lyles maybe,
what, three, four times
in a four-year cycle?
I agree, 100%.
It's something that I've talked to
World Athletics, USATF,
the Diamond Leagues, constantly
about. I mean, you know what?
The hardest pill
is going to be for us to swallow as a sport.
Sprint just came out.
It is successful around the world.
It's successful in the U.S.
They're about to come out with another season, and it's going to do
great. The hard part
is that we as
a sport are not ready for the
popularity that is going to come.
Everybody's going to say, I want to be a track and field fan.
I want to follow Fred.
I want to follow Noah.
I want to follow Arian.
Guess what?
We don't even have a place
to tell them to go to watch the track.
Because it's in every other
different country, a different place.
And you got to get a VPN
and you got to find your own website.
You got to go on these back alley places to just watch regular TV in a different language.
We ourselves are not ready infrastructurally wise to say, hey, world, come on.
We got something amazing for you.
And that's the hard part.
The rights just for the Diamond Leagues just got dropped by NBC and moved the flow track.
Now we're putting it behind a paywall and making it even harder for fans to become new fans.
It hurts.
It hurts because I knew this was going to happen.
I knew that this was that Sprint was going to be successful because we have great athletes, great stories.
The sucky part is we are not ready for it yet. We need
to get ready and we need to do it fast
because it's coming to LA.
Is
the event you're talking about
is Michael Johnson, what he just launched?
I think he got Sid McLaughlin.
I think he had a couple of... Grand Slam track.
Grand Slam track, yes.
Have they
approached you about being an active
participant in this?
I've been in talks
between me, Michael, and my
agent. We've been in talks
since the day I heard about it.
Trying to get as much information,
trying to get as much
feed on it, a feel
for what's going on. There's a lot that I like
that he's doing. There's a few things that I
think could be a little better, but the thing that's
stopping me at the heart of it is I
have yet to hear a TV provider.
Again,
what good is it if we're producing these
great times, these great shows,
these great rivalries, and we haven't had no
right to see it? Because now we're in
the same problem with the Diamond Leagues
and with World Championships. I need to hear a TV provider. i need to know that it's going to be able to get
seen consistently yeah i think that and that's one of the important things to grow the sport
um is exposure you have to have the exposure you have to have the visibility also on on on the back
end of that and what i like is is the more personalities that we have in track and field,
those that don't just go out and do their job and just do it quietly, but make noise while they're doing it.
It creates a certain excitement for people that don't watch or just might be just casual fans.
It forces and makes people want to tune in and see what's going to happen,
especially when you have guys that are polarizing like yourself,
that have the personality and have the enthusiasm
and this certain aura about them
that makes you want to watch,
even if you're not a track fan.
But again, man, the TV exposure and visibility
is very important.
And it's sad in 2024 that it's not where it should be
where more people can watch it.
No, I know you
didn't participate in the 4x1,
but what was your level
of disappointment? Because if you
look at what they ran to
qualify, they ran 37-40.
37-40 would have won the
gold. If I'm not mistaken, Canada ran
37-50, which won the gold medal
in the time that they qualified
with. And one of the problems that I have,
you was the only person
that didn't run in the
qualifying rounds. You were going to run
anchor. Why would they move
the championship, the
world championship team, Coleman,
handed the baton
to Fred Curley. Why would you
take Fred from second leg and put him on
anchor when Fred has been running
second leg for the last
two to three big meets?
There's a lot I want to say, but
I'm going to start with this.
I first want to give props
to that team for not throwing anybody under
the bus after they did not complete the
task.
Because if we want to get better,
we can't be blaming people.
So I don't want to come out here and start blaming people.
No, I'm blaming the coaches.
That is usually... But therein lies the problem.
How many people are in the coaches' ear?
That.
That is the thing that gets usa in trouble because you got to know that some of these athletes are nike athletes with nike coaches
i'm an adidas athlete when adidas coach and some coaches opinions personal are held at higher
regard than other coaches opinions and when one person is taken down, i.e. me, it creates now a shift.
And everybody wants to go into different places because they're a little bit scared and they're a little bit nervous.
And they want to do it a little different.
And I feel in that vacuum of me leaving, it provided everybody a chance to say, OK, well, we can now switch it up a different way.
And unfortunately, because of that, we weren't prepared.
You know, those were those were handoffs that were not practiced when we practiced.
And seeing it was what had happened was was heartbreaking.
It was truly heartbreaking because I believe there were two in my head.
There were two great options that we had.
One was to use the team from the prelims that would have got the job done.
And the other was to put Kenny on the anchor leg.
Unfortunately, that's not the route that we went.
And it just didn't get done.
It is.
It's heartbreaking to see.
But, you know, five Olympics. We haven't been able to get the baton around five. just didn't get done. It's heartbreaking to see. No. Five Olympics?
We haven't been able to get the
baton around? Five?
All I know is every time I'm on the anchor, we
win. That's all I know.
Well, if you need to suck it up, you should
have went out there with that mask on and sucked it up.
I was thinking about
that when I was watching
it.
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We had Quincy Hall on,
and Quincy said, I know you said you wanted to run not only the 4x1,
but the 4x4.
Quincy believes that you can lay down
a blistering time in the open four.
What do you think you, what can you, what's your PR currently, and what do you that you can lay down a blistering time in the open for what do you think you what can you what can you what's your PR currently
and what do you think you can run with
some training oh I haven't run the four
open forces high school
I think I ran like 47
for but I've run
44 splits I've run
45 splits multiple times
if I train
I'm put like this so So Jareem Richards,
he runs for Trinidad and Tobago.
We train together. He is a
19-8
200-meter runner.
And he decided he was going to focus more on the
400 this year. He was in that
finals. He got
fourth, right? Maybe he got fourth?
Yeah, he got fourth with
43-7. New national record record i believe it's in the
all-time top 10 all-time fastest times four you got four my pr is 19.3
in the 200 and i have some pretty good strength on me as well. I truly would like to take a shot at the world record.
If I decide to move to the 400 truly and give it my 100% for multiple years,
yeah, I'm going after the world record if I'm going after it.
Hold on.
The world record in the two or the world record in the four?
In the four.
I'm doing it in the two as well.
No, do you understand those times times 4303 and 1919 i'm gonna tell you this
my brain understands it my body don't know the difference oh wow i like that i like that
why would my body think that's a hard time my body don't know that that's hard
if i keep telling it to get faster and faster,
it's going to try and adapt.
So it's going to keep
moving towards that time.
Can I ask you this,
Noah?
Let's just say for the sake of argument,
28 is going to be here before you know it. So that's four
years away. And I know
your pride. I know your baby. You
got the gold in the hundred meters but you're
really known as a 200 meter guy if you don't win the gold medal at the olympics in the 200 meters
what is noah lyles going to tell himself i'm going to tell myself i'm still noah lyles
i'm still the man i was when i showed up and after I left, of course, I want the gold.
And I'm going to make sure that I try my 100% to get it done.
But I will tell you that just because I don't have the gold, that doesn't make me less of a person.
That doesn't make me less of a human being.
That just means that I wasn't able to get the task that I set myself up for.
But I will be so disappointed in myself if I didn't give it my 100%.
The world
will be here. If I'm not mistaken, the world are in Tokyo.
That's going to be
here before you know it.
We're going.
September?
We're going.
I'm already pre-qualified because I'm the world championship in both, so I
automatically get the buy.
So,
what are you looking to
defend your crown in the 100 and the 200?
Of course.
The way I'm going to see these next
three years is I
want to perfect
how to handle the double.
When I was going through the
last cycle, Olympic cycle, I was trying to
perfect how to make my 200 so good that I can run the 100.
Now I've been able to have both of them.
Now I want to say I want to be prepared to run my facets each and every round.
I want to know the 100 like the back of my hand.
I want to know the 200 like both of my hands.
like both of my hands yeah i want to make sure that i am fully prepared creating blueprints going down each year saying hey when we get to the olympus when we get to la we are going to be
so prepared that no matter what is thrown at us we'll be ready for it but when you think about
that having to be able to go round by round whether it be the 100 or 200 then you have
competition understanding everybody's strengths and weaknesses. Then you have to push your body to a point to where you
can go round by round where you don't have to exert that much energy and you're that much better
than everybody else. When I sit here and think about it, do you understand how difficult a task
that is to push your body to a point to where it's able to do that round by round
and still win and run fast
but also come
out on top and win the one and the two?
Of course. Of course it's difficult.
Of course everybody wants
it. If it was easy, everybody would do it.
Come on now. I'm not
here to do the easy. I'm not here to do the mundane.
That's not what excites me. I want
to do the things that nobody's done. The things are hard the things that challenge my body the reason i like
to get up and practice every day is because i like to see what my body can truly do what is what if i
push it and do everything right to the fullest what can happen i want to see that every time
no can you provide some context there's this time magazine story that came out
that revealed that while you were negotiating your contract with adidas they offered you an
invite to a shoe release for anthony edwards and i think everybody's read the quote quote can you
provide context for what transpired i mean we, we don't need to get into negotiations, but what transpired is what's being reported.
How accurate is that?
So what what was going on at the time?
I was in negotiations for over a year with Adidas to get to to get the contract.
Them offering me, you know, to go to ants for shoe release had nothing to do with the contract.
They just thought it would
be cool that i would show up as one of their adidas athletes unfortunately i agree they asked
for it very late they asked for it probably about two weeks in advance and i was already scheduled
to walk in hugo boss show in milan which was a day and a half before his shoe release okay so at
first we were trying to figure out ways that we can get
there and it was like yeah this this this isn't good this isn't gonna work there's no way that
i'd be able to walk and then get on the flight and have energy enough to be able to go to this
event because it wasn't just a shoe release they were also gonna you know have us go to a little
baby concert and we were gonna be just signing autographs it was gonna be a lot it was gonna
be a lot and i was already drained from you know flying over already doing the fashion shows
doing the walks you know going to other events you know i was already drowned like this there's
no way that i'd be able to physically do this well i know i i agree with you flying overseas
as in it's someone that's flown overseas and then come back you're kind of jet lagged but you
probably should have left it as that. It's that the other stuff where
you get into trouble, where people are picking
apart what you said, is because
like, hold on, I'm the world champ
and he's getting this, and you have the
wherewithal, the forward thinking
to see that he's going to be special
and why can't you guys see that with me?
Now, I will say
being very vulnerable in this
moment, I felt very unheard at that moment with Adidas.
I felt very unheard.
And to give an example, people do a lot of things.
What do you do when you feel unheard?
You try to shout louder.
Yes.
And I felt that I have had many conversations trying to shout and it hadn't gotten through.
Right.
And unfortunately that was one of my moments where I felt I had to shout to
even get them to look my way.
Okay.
In that time article.
And cause they asked me if I wanted to take it out and I decided I was not
going to,
because I had to stand on my decision at that moment.
I felt that I had to shout to get even a conversation about what I wanted to happen or what was going on at that point to be to move forward.
Yeah. Could it be better? Probably.
OK, was there more ways to do it? Probably. But in that moment, I felt that I had taken so many steps in other ways that I had to shout at this moment.
Let me let me ask this one follow up. Do you regret your decision not to have that removed from the article?
that removed from the article?
I don't
believe so at the moment.
This conversation
could be had in a year
and I could have a different answer.
At this moment, I do not
feel so. Because I still
feel if I did not shout
at that moment, I would not have
had the preamble to
oh, he is serious. And when I
said it at the Olympics, they knew
it was still on my heart.
Go ahead, Joe.
No, I was good.
I was good because you hit
on what I was going to piggyback
and ask as well.
Another question, Noah.
In track and field, there have only been two men
that's ever had a shoe. Michael Johnson
and Usain Bolt.
Two.
Michael Johnson had the world record
in the 100 and the 200, and he don't know
anything but gold medals. I think he's a four-time
world champ in the 400,
two-time world champ in the 200.
He's a two-time champ
in the 400, and he's a one-time
champ in the 200 and you you say
i just say you saying boat i don't need to say anything else yeah what make why do you believe
that you deserve to be in that category with those guys looking at their accomplishments
not to say you're not done yet but but looking at their accomplishments, looking at yours, why did Noah
Lyles believe he deserves a shoot?
The reason I believe it is
twofold. One, we look at Michael Johnson.
Michael Johnson,
he is a track
guy through and through. That's all. He's
track, and he loves track,
and that's what he decided his lane was going to
be. I don't feel that
in his time period, we had the social media,
we had the marketing, the self-marketing to be able to push it forward.
Of course, he had Nike, and Nike was doing very well,
but they wanted to keep it.
I don't think that they really wanted to keep pushing it,
and I don't know if Michael Johnson wanted to do the work or not to market it as well.
I don't know how much they had in their contract to keep that shoe alive.
That's where I'm going to leave it with that.
The time period wasn't right.
With Usain Bolt, the CEO that actually gave Bolt his shoe is now what it is.
And I've had conversations. that actually gave Bolt his shoe is now what Adidas.
And I've had conversations,
and I think Usain was very excited in the moment,
and then he got excited about something else when it was time to do the underground work,
the marketing, the commercials, and stuff like that.
And that scared a lot of companies i think in that moment
also you saying is jamaican the marketing in the u.s is different i feel one of our in the u.s is
is a it turns out when it comes to marketing entertainment and marketing is the u.s is bread
and butter we know how to do that. Like, that's just our thing.
So now that I'm an American, in a time period where self-marketing is very popular and it's very, you know.
Very prevalent.
It's strong, you know.
Everybody wants to do it.
Everybody's looking at it.
They want the brand.
They want the identity.
You know, a person's identity is more marketable sometimes than a brand at times.
And now we see them as brands.
I know that I can do the work.
I know that I can get the medals.
But at the end of the day, I think that it comes down to guys.
You now have the title of the world's fastest man.
What do you do with that title?
You tell them, don't you want to have the shoes of the world's fastest man. What do you do with that title? You tell them, don't you want to have
the shoes of the
world's fastest man? Don't you want to put
those shoes on your feet? I'm wearing
the same shoes as the world's fastest man.
It's going to make me so fast.
But the shoes that
the world's fastest man wears, track spikes.
No, he only wears track spikes
on the track.
But he trains in tennis shoes. When he's came track but he trains in tennis shoes hey he's in tennis shoes
and when people go out and run marathons they wear tennis shoes and when you're in the gym
you wear tennis shoes and guess what you're wearing tennis shoes everybody wears tennis shoes
and the only reason that you don't see more marketing for tennis shoes and individual
runners is because they just haven't
done it. But why are
we saying just because it hasn't been done means it
can't be done?
I mean, if it was
going to happen, the timing is now.
The timing is now, especially
while the stove is
hot, as I'll call it. Right now, the stove is hot.
You are the stove. And while it's hot,
you take advantage of that. And there there's always a market for everything no matter what it is
everything is marketable especially when it has the right push and people behind it so there's
really no excuse on their end and this is why we need certain individuals in positions of power
to make these things and transitions a little bit easier. And it shouldn't have to be a fight.
We have to yell and scream all the goddamn time to get shit done.
Well,
you know,
you're going to have to,
you're going to have to start posting a little bit more on IG.
You saying has 14 million IG followers.
You got 1.5.
Give us your IG handle.
You own IG and Twitter.
No,
Joe 18 at laws. No, on Twitter. You know, Joe 18 on Tik TOK. You know, handle? You on IG and Twitter? Nojo18 at Liles Noah
on Twitter and Nojo18
on TikTok.
I mean, Usain has
had his career. I'm still in the middle of my career.
Oh, yeah.
Let's get the main part.
Go out and follow Noah Liles
at the app
that he just gave you. It's been
a pleasure.
Three-time world champion to 200 meters.
One-time champion to 100 meters at the world.
Olympic gold medalist.
Anchored the world championship team last year.
Go ahead, Ocho.
I just want to know before you go,
how nervous would you be if you had to race me?
I'm just curious.
I'm just thinking about it.
Race you?
I'm going to be pretty nervous for you. I don want you to catch a cramp oh no oh oh i know what i'm gonna ask before we get out of here this was a hypothetical i was just curious i wanted to
know how nervous you would be but you think i would catch a cramp but i drink i drink pickle
juice i'll be fine oh i forgot i forgot this one oh joe we forgot it tyreek Tyreek say he wants some of you Noah
I can't believe you know who Tyreek is
don't do that Noah you know who
the cheater I'm gonna be honest
I forget his name all the time
I'm gonna be honest if it's not about track
and it ain't about League of Legends
my yeah
he said come get some
he said come get some
I'm gonna put it like this.
Tyreek is just chasing clout.
The man, anytime somebody fast comes up, he says he wants to race them.
If he really wanted to race people, he would have showed up like DK Metcalf.
And the man raced in the 60 meters this year in the Masters Division.
The man dodged a smoke.
I don't got time for that.
Reek!
Hey, Reek, he calling you out.
Hey, you know what? Let's get a couple of...
Hey, let's see if we can get some sponsors.
Would you be willing to raise Reek in a 60
or 100 if we got some sponsors to put some money up?
You got to do 60.
We're racing in 100.
We can raise. If he's serious about it,
if he's truly serious about it,
I'm not talking about you
just talking on the internet
and you ain't actually coming to me
and talking to my agent
and saying,
let's set something up.
You are seriously about it.
You'll see me on the track.
Ooh.
All right.
There he is, ladies and gentlemen.
The current fastest man in the world,
Noah Lyles.
Noah, thank you for giving us
some of your time.
Noah, I appreciate you.
I appreciate you.
Thanks for the opportunity, guys. Salute. All right. We'll see you down the road. Good luck. Hey, you you for giving us some of your time. I appreciate you. Thanks for the opportunity, guys.
All right. We'll see you down the road. Good luck.
Hey, you got any meets coming up? Are you done
for this year? You shutting it down?
I'm done for this year, man. I'm shutting it down.
Okay. All right.
Best of luck, bro. And congratulations
on the 100-meter goal, the bronze
and the 200-meter. Get healthy
and we'll see you next year in the world. Good luck,
bro. Yes, we will.
Thank you, man. Noah man no allows ladies and gentlemen that was that was that was awesome it was great to have noah on and to uh to get an opportunity to pick his brain and talk to him about the the what he's
what he's thinking going into the 100 meters uh the covid diagnosis and being able to try to still
go out there to compete for gold. He ends up getting
bronze. Nothing to hang his head about with
that. But
tremendous effort. Great conversation,
Ocho. Very, very
forthcoming. Didn't dodge anything.
Every question that we set forth,
he answered it.
And that's all we can ask.
That's all we can ask.
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