logo
After pushing his rival, sprinter Kenny Bednarek has made up with Noah Lyles. He still expects ‘fireworks' at their next race

After pushing his rival, sprinter Kenny Bednarek has made up with Noah Lyles. He still expects ‘fireworks' at their next race

CNN4 days ago
People in sports
OlympicsFacebookTweetLink
Follow
Sprint star Kenny Bednarek told CNN Sports that he has cleared the air with Noah Lyles after a heated conclusion to their 200-meter race at the USA Track and Field Championships.
Lyles finished just ahead of Bednarek in Sunday's event, looking over at his rival as he took the lead and surged across the finish line. Bednarek, apparently irked by the sideways glance, responded by pushing Lyles in the back.
The pair then came together and exchanged words before eventually shaking hands, though Bednarek later told reporters that he thought Lyles' behavior was 'unsportsmanlike' and disrespectful.
Now, however, the two-time Olympic silver medalist says that there is no bad blood between them.
'As you saw, no one stared me down. I gave a push. I feel like we both could have handled that situation a little bit differently and with more respect,' Bednarek told CNN Sports.
'Emotions were high, you're still in the running phase and all that stuff. But we both decided to discuss the situation after the event was done and that's what we did. We had about an hour-long conversation and it was a really good, honest conversation. We both came to an agreement with things and we're good now.'
The incident has only heightened tensions ahead of next month's World Athletics Championships in Tokyo, where Lyles and Bednarek will go head-to-head in the 100m and 200m.
Lyles, the defending world and Olympic champion over 100m, has the edge over his compatriot with Sunday's 200m victory in Eugene, but Bednarek has been in the form of his life of late, running a personal best of 9.79 seconds in the 100m to take his first national title in the event.
For many track and field fans, the burgeoning rival between two of the fastest men in the world is exactly what the sport needs.
'We're both high competitors, and I want to win just as bad as he wants to win and has been winning,' said Bednarek. 'The situation happened and we just wanted to move on from it and we're in a good place right now.
'We're good with each other and we're just excited to line it up again in Tokyo and getting ready for going against the world.'
Bednarek and Lyles, a six-time world champion, are set to renew their rivalry at the Diamond League meet in Lausanne, Switzerland later this month.
According to World Athletics data, the pair have faced each other 18 times in 100m and 200m finals, with Lyles getting the better of Bednarek in 14 of those.
Their latest head-to-head in Eugene looked to be going the way of Bednarek, traditionally a 200m specialist, as he moved past Lyles and took a commanding lead down the home straight.
Lyles, however, is renowned for his strong finish, and hit back in the closing meters to take the victory in 19.63 seconds – the fastest time in the world this year and just 0.04 seconds ahead of Bednarek.
'When it comes to 100 and 200, that rivalry that me and Noah really have right there, it's real, and every single time we step on the track, you're going to expect some fireworks,' said the 26-year-old.
'It's going to be intense every single time we step on that track … He got the better of me and I feel like when we line it up again, I'm going to win and that's the confidence that I have in my ability.'
Bednarek, whose headbands have earned him the nickname 'Kung Fu Kenny,' is still yet to win a major world or Olympic title, but he might feel like this year could be his time.
Having won all six of his races across three Grand Slam Track meets between April and June, Bednarek was crowned Racer of the Year in the inaugural season of the league launched by sprinting great Michael Johnson.
He owns the second-fastest times in the world this year in the 100m and 200m, behind Jamaica's Kishane Thompson in the former and, of course, Lyles in the latter.
The uptick in his performances, Bednarek thinks, is down to a 'mental shift' in recent months.
'The physical parts have been there for a very long time,' he explained to CNN Sports, 'but I think this year I just came in with a different mindset. It's one thing wanting to win, but then believing that you can win – I feel like this year that's the mentality that changed.
'Everything that my coach has been teaching me throughout the years, I really didn't understand it. I think with the maturity of being a professional athlete, everything is starting to come in sync. I'm starting to understand the little things and it's just helped my performance skyrocket.'
With the World Championships on the horizon and a fierce rivalry to fuel him, this could be Bednarek's turn to step into the spotlight. A gold medal on the global stage must now feel closer than ever before.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Asher Hong rolls to US all-around gymnastics title ahead of Stoughton's Frederick Richard
Asher Hong rolls to US all-around gymnastics title ahead of Stoughton's Frederick Richard

Boston Globe

time3 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Asher Hong rolls to US all-around gymnastics title ahead of Stoughton's Frederick Richard

Hong finished with the top scores on floor exercise, vault, and still rings, events where the rising Stanford senior's power easily translates. Asher Hong is dialed in at nationals with an incredible performance on pommel horse. 💪 📺 CNBC & Peacock | — NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) The real race was for second, where Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Rather than don the stirrup pants that have long been the norm, Richard wore gray shorts with matching leggings underneath, a small sacrifice the 21-year-old says he's willing to make while competing at domestic elite meets in hopes of making the sport a little 'cooler' to potential fans. Advertisement Frederick Richard competed on the pommel horse in his nonconforming gear. Gerald Herbert/Associated Press Colt Walker was fourth in the final meet before the world championships in Jakarta, Indonesia, in October. Two-time national champion Brody Malone, who skipped floor exercise and vault to put a little less stress on his surgically repaired right knee, placed first on parallel bars, second on rings, and third on pommel horse to put him in a strong position to return to worlds for the first time since 2022. Advertisement While Hong, Richard, Malone, and Nedoroscik are pressing on, the fifth member of the 2024 Olympic team — Paul Juda — announced his retirement Saturday night. Related :

Asher Hong wins U.S. all-around gymnastics title by record margin, leads world team
Asher Hong wins U.S. all-around gymnastics title by record margin, leads world team

NBC Sports

time7 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Asher Hong wins U.S. all-around gymnastics title by record margin, leads world team

Asher Hong won the U.S. men's all-around gymnastics title by a record margin under a 20-year-old scoring system. Hong, a 21-year-old rising Stanford junior, totaled 170.02 points over two days in New Orleans, distancing fellow Olympic team bronze medalist Frederick Richard by 7.465 points. Hong had the largest margin victory under the Code of Points system implemented in 2006. The previous record was 5.55 points by Sam Mikulak in 2019. Hong, who won his first national title in 2023, is the youngest man to win a second all-around crown since Paul Hamm in 2003. GYMNASTICS: Results | Broadcast Schedule Next, Hong will bid for his first individual medal at a global meet at the worlds in Jakarta, Indonesia. Hong was part of U.S. bronze-medal teams at the last worlds in 2023 and at the 2024 Olympics. The worlds in the year after the Olympics do not have a team event; just the individual all-around and the six apparatus finals. Hong won national titles on floor exercise, still rings and vault. Last year, he missed the eight-man Olympic final on rings and vault by one spot. At nationals, his average difficulty between his two vaults — 5.4 — matched the most difficult set done at the Asian and European Championships earlier this spring. To join Hong, five more men will be named later to round out the six-man roster at worlds. Brody Malone, a three-time U.S. all-around champion, competed on four of six events this week, skipping floor exercise and vault after his surgically repaired right knee flared up in the spring. Malone won parallel bears, but his best case for making the world team is for high bar, where he won a world title in 2022. After falling twice off the bar Thursday, he posted the top score of the week by a massive 1.601 points on Saturday. Stephen Nedoroscik optimistic in pommel horse return Stephen Nedoroscik, the Pommel Horse Guy from the Paris Olympics, will not be on the world team. He came off the horse during his routine Saturday. Nedoroscik finished fifth on the event overall in his first competition since the Games and after taking nine months off from training. 'Good news is I'm going to have a good amount of time here to get better, and I'm looking forward to that,' he said on NBC Sports. 'Generally, three months (back in training) was a little bit rushed for me.' Paul Juda retires from gymnastics Paul Juda, the lone member of the Olympic bronze medal team not competing this week, said Saturday that he has retired. He called it an easy decision. 'This has been the journey of a lifetime,' he said. 'I've got no regrets. I'm full of joy, and I'm ready to move on with my life.' Nationals finish Sunday with the second day of women's competition (7 p.m. ET, NBC and Peacock). Nick Zaccardi,

Olympic gold medalist Hezly Rivera surges to the lead at the U.S. gymnastics championships
Olympic gold medalist Hezly Rivera surges to the lead at the U.S. gymnastics championships

San Francisco Chronicle​

time8 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Olympic gold medalist Hezly Rivera surges to the lead at the U.S. gymnastics championships

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Hezly Rivera cruised to the lead at the U.S. gymnastics championships on Friday night, putting together four steady and occasionally excellent routines on her way to a 55.600, putting her in strong position to claim her first national title on Sunday. Rivera, the youngest member of the five-woman team that cruised to gold at the 2024 Olympics, bounced back from a bumpy performance at the U.S. Classic last month. The now 17-year-old posted the top score on balance beam (14.350) and the second-highest score on floor exercise (14.000) to lead a very young field taking their first tentative steps toward the world championships this fall and — well down the road — the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. Joscelyn Roberson, an Olympic alternate last summer and a rising sophomore at Arkansas, is second at 55.400. Roberson, who trained alongside two-time Olympic champion Simone Biles, finished with a dazzling floor routine to move past four-time world championship medalist Leanne Wong at 55.100. Rivera, Roberson and Wong will head into Sunday well ahead of the rest of a field whose average age is just under 18, a significant departure from the run-up to Paris, when Biles and a group of older athletes took center stage. ___

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store