logo
Tyreek Hill challenges Noah Lyles after running a 100-meter dash that wouldn't beat Noah Lyles

Tyreek Hill challenges Noah Lyles after running a 100-meter dash that wouldn't beat Noah Lyles

Yahoo15 hours ago

Tyreek Hill took his rivalry with track star Noah Lyles several steps further on Friday, throwing down a 100-meter dash time that had him at the front of the pack at the Last Chance Sprint Series.
The Miami Dolphins wide receiver recorded a new personal best of 10.15 seconds in his first 100-meter dash since 2014, the best mark of the 91 sprinters to run in the heats at Sherman Oaks, California.
Hill delivered a message immediately after the race: "Noah could never." The two have said they plan to race at some point before the U.S. outdoor championships in July.
Let's make one thing clear: Hill returning to track at 31 years old and throwing down a time that wouldn't look out of place at the world championships is an outrageously impressive achievement and a strong reminder that all your favorite NFL players are simply mutants when compared to 99.9% of the population.
Advertisement
For perspective, Hill would have qualified for the semifinals of the 100 meter dash at the 2024 Olympics if he had run 10.15 seconds in Paris (Nigeria's Favour Ashe was the final qualifier with a time of 10.16 seconds). Hill did have a 1.2 mph of wind assistance in California, but there's no denying it, Hill looked like an elite track runner on Friday. It is a credit to him that we're even talking about him like this.
Unfortunately, Hill is not in a feud with an elite track runner. He is in a feud with the elite track runner.
Tyreek Hill's time is slow by Noah Lyles' standards
Hill said "Noah could never," but the fact is that Lyles has, several times, for years.
Advertisement
Lyles ran a 10.14 in 2015, 13 days after his 18th birthday. Lyles won the Olympics with a time of 9.79 seconds and won the 2023 world championships with a time of 9.83 seconds. He has not run a time slower than 10.15 seconds in an event on World Athletics' ledger since April 2022.
A difference of a quarter of a second doesn't sound like much, but it can separate a first- and last-place finish in an elite track event. And it takes an enormous amount of training and natural gifts to close the gap.
Granted, Hill might beat Lyles if they raced tomorrow, but that's because Lyles is currently dealing with an ankle injury.
Tyreek Hill is one of the fastest men in the world. He still has to make up some ground to catch Noah Lyles. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)
(Diamond Images via Getty Images)
None of that means Hill is incapable of beating Lyles in a future race. Track is all about training and Hill could still make up some ground there, and/or have a really a good day while Lyles has a bad day. It just needs to be said, Hill isn't there yet.
Advertisement
Hill probably knows that, because he told reporters last month he was planning to run a 10-flat on Friday. He also said he hopes to race Lyles soon and compete in the 2028 Olympics — as a track runner, not a flag football player — so this isn't close to over.
It's been an eventful offseason overall for Hill, who opened it by saying he wanted out of Miami after their season-ending loss. He later walked those comments back and apologized. There was also a domestic incident in April, in which his wife called police and said she feared for their daughter's safety.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Let the alibi artists stand aside' - why Oakmont is toughest US Open test
'Let the alibi artists stand aside' - why Oakmont is toughest US Open test

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Let the alibi artists stand aside' - why Oakmont is toughest US Open test

Dustin Johnson won by three shots when the US Open was last hosted at Oakmont in 2016 [Getty Images] Pittsburgh, America's historic steel city also famed for coal mining, is known as a hub for hard industrial labour. And these qualities extend to its most famed golf course. There are few, if any, tougher more uncompromising tests than Oakmont Country Club, the home of this week's US Open. Advertisement This is a place where players have to roll up their sleeves and get on with it despite the golfing environment's stark harshness. Defending champion Bryson DeChambeau summed it up for his legion of YouTube followers when he said: "This course doesn't just challenge your game, it challenges your sanity." This is the latest in a long line of observations about a course that will stage the US Open for a record 10th time, starting on Thursday. Seven-time major winner Gene Sarazen started the trend when he said Oakmont possesses "all the charm of a sock to the head". The US Open is meant to be the toughest test and of all the courses that stage the Unites States' national championship, this appears the toughest. It is the ultimate US Open venue. 'A poor shot should be a shot lost' Rory McIlroy hacking out of the Oakmont rough during a practice round in 2016 - he would miss the cut that year [Getty Images] Huge undulating, sloped greens are lightning fast. Another legend, Sam Snead, joked: "I put a dime down to mark my ball and the dime slipped away." Advertisement It was seeing a Sarazen putt run off an Oakmont green at the 1935 championship that inspired Edward Stimpson to invent the measuring device known as a "Stimpmeter" to calibrate just how fast a green is running. Six times major champion Lee Trevino noted the difficulty of the greens when he observed: "Every time I two putted at Oakmont, I was passing somebody on the leaderboard." The rough is thick and juicy and its 175 bunkers are harsh, penal hazards. Phil Mickelson, who this week plays his 34th and most likely final US Open, thinks it is "the hardest golf course we have ever played". Geoff Ogilvy, the champion in 2006 at Winged Foot - another brutal venue, said: "Playing Oakmont was like the hardest hole you have ever played on every hole." Advertisement The course was built in the early 20th century by Henry Clay Fownes after he sold his burgeoning steel business to Andrew Carnegie. The Fownes family were among the best players in Western Pennsylvania at the time. Now they had the wealth to indulge their sporting passion and they transformed 191 acres of farmland at a place called Plum on the outskirts of Pittsburgh into one of the most feared pieces of golfing architecture ever built. It was the only course HC Fownes designed and it has more than stood the test of time. He did not see golf as any kind of beauty contest. "Let the clumsy, the spineless, the alibi artists stand aside, a poor shot should be a shot irrevocably lost," he stated. Advertisement When the course opened in 1904 it measured 6,406 yards and was par-80. This week it is stretched to 7,431 yards and the par score is 71. Dubbed "Soakmont" when it last staged the US Open, heavy rainfall softened fairways and greens, Dustin Johnson's winning score was still only four under, admittedly including a controversial penalty for unintentionally moving his ball on the fifth hole of the final round. Joint runners up Shane Lowry, Jim Furyk and Scott Piercy, who were three shots behind, were the only other players to beat par. When Angel Cabrera won in 2007, the course was fast and firm and the Argentine was the only contender to break 70 on the final day. His 69 was enough to finish five over for a one-shot win over Furyk and Tiger Woods. 'Bunkers not designed to be a bail out' The 'Church Pews' bunker between the third and fourth holes is one of the most famous in golf [Getty Images] This time we can anticipate a similar scenario to the one that yielded Johnson's first major nine years ago because the Pittsburgh area has suffered its wettest spring on record. Advertisement The greens will still be very quick but perhaps more likely to hold approach shots than they were in 2007. But the five-inch deep rough will be damp, lush and brutal. And unlike most recent US Open venues it will not be 'graduated' with shorter grass nearer the immaculate fairways. It will be short grass and then long grass with nothing in between - classically uncompromising in the finest Oakmont tradition. The bunkers are not designed to be a bail out. The sand is unsympathetic and forms a genuine hazard, as do strategic ditches that criss-cross the layout. Between the third and fourth fairways lies the famous 'Church Pews' bunker, more than 100 yards long and up to 43 yards wide with a dozen turf islands (the pews) striped across to punish wayward tee shots. Advertisement The par-three eighth could be stretched to more than 300 yards and is the longest 'short' hole in championship golf. "I haven't played it since they lengthened it to be a short par five," Jack Nicklaus, the winner at Oakmont in 1962, recently joked. Some hate the idea of par-three holes playing at such length. Nicklaus called it "crazy" but it is a good golf hole and par is just a number, albeit one that can mess with a player's head. And therein lies the ultimate aspect of US Open golf. Yes the United States Golf Association want to test every club in the bag but they also want to examine the 15th club - the one that resides between the ears. The winner will be the player who deals best with the inevitable setbacks inflicted by a course known as "the beast" but who also plays the best golf. Advertisement That might seem an obvious statement, but accurate driving and unerring approach play can yield rich rewards. After a third-round 76, Johnny Miller fired a final-round 63 to win in 1973 with what is still regarded as one of the greatest rounds ever played. In 2016 Lowry shot a 65 to take the 54-hole lead, so low scores are possible. But over four long days, which may well suffer weekend weather interruption, there will be sufficient snakes to counterbalance the very few ladders afforded by this ultra-demanding course. In short, it is going to be very, very hard work; just as it should be at the US Open in this part of the world.

Agustín Ramírez homers twice to power Miami Marlins past Washington Nationals 11-9
Agustín Ramírez homers twice to power Miami Marlins past Washington Nationals 11-9

CBS News

time16 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Agustín Ramírez homers twice to power Miami Marlins past Washington Nationals 11-9

Rookie Agustín Ramírez hit two home runs and Eric Wagaman had three RBIs to help the Miami Marlins hand the Washington Nationals their sixth straight loss, 11-9 on Friday night in a game that included a rain delay of more than two hours. Ramírez hit a solo shot off Nationals starter Mitchell Parker (4-7) in the first for a 1-0 lead and then hit his 10th of the season leading off a four-run third as Miami took a 6-0 lead. Miami Marlins' Agustin Ramirez follows through on his single during the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Washington Nationals, Friday, June 13, 2025, in Washington. Nick Wass / AP It was Ramírez's second multihomer game after hitting two solo shots in a 7-6 loss to Seattle on April 27. Wagaman had an RBI double and Dane Myers added a two-run double as Miami built the six-run advantage. CJ Abrams reached on an infield hit and James Wood followed with his 17th homer to get the Nationals within 6-2 after three. Fortes and Xavier Edwards had RBI singles in the fifth following a delay of 2 hours, 14 minutes for an 8-2 lead. Wood hit a two-run double and Nathaniel Lowe, Alex Call and Keibert Ruiz followed with RBI singles as Washington scored five times in the seventh to pull within 8-7. Miami answered with Wagaman's two-run single and Connor Norby's RBI groundout in the eighth. Edwin Cabrera allowed two runs in a three-inning start for Miami. Tyler Phillips (1-0) got two outs for the win. Parker allowed six runs and eight hits in 3 1/3 innings. Jackson Rutledge got the final two outs in the fourth before the second delay and then allowed two runs. Jose A. Ferrer was tagged for three runs on four hits in an inning. Miami has won three of four against Washington this season. Key moment Calvin Faucher allowed a one-out single before getting groundouts from Robert Hassell III and Abrams to finish off his sixth save in nine opportunities. Key stat Miami's minus-91 run differential is the second worst in the NL followed by Washington at minus-60. Up next Miami had not announced who will start Saturday's game opposite Washington RHP Trevor Williams (3-7, 5.91).

Key protector for Vikings' JJ McCarthy takes big step in return from 2024 season-ending injury
Key protector for Vikings' JJ McCarthy takes big step in return from 2024 season-ending injury

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Key protector for Vikings' JJ McCarthy takes big step in return from 2024 season-ending injury

The post Key protector for Vikings' JJ McCarthy takes big step in return from 2024 season-ending injury appeared first on ClutchPoints. The Minnesota Vikings are in the middle of minicamp as the team prepares for the upcoming season. JJ McCarthy is leading the way as the starting quarterback for the first time in his career after sitting out last season with an injury. On Tuesday, the second-year quarterback got some good news about one of his key protectors also returning from injury. Advertisement Minnesota announced that left tackle Christian Darrisaw returned to practice. He was spotted participating in individual drills, as he works his way back from a torn ACL he suffered in the Vikings' 30-20 Week 8 loss to the Los Angeles Rams. That's big news for the Vikings, as Darrisaw is one of the more consistent offensive linemen in the league. The 26-year-old left tackle should play a key role upon his return and help protect McCarthy throughout next season. Especially with this being JJ McCarthy's first time ever playing as a starting quarterback in the NFL. McCarthy, who is 22 years old, is coming off a torn ACL injury himself. He was potentially in the mix to start for the Vikings last season; however, he was ruled out for his entire rookie year before the season even started. Sam Darnold filled in and played well enough to earn a three-year, $100.5 million contract. Advertisement Minnesota might just be getting healthy at the right time. There's still plenty of time between now and Week 1. But the Vikings are hoping for big things next season after finding success in the 2024-25 campaign. Especially if McCarthy proves to be the franchise quarterback the team needs. The last time he took the field, McCarthy was playing for the Michigan Wolverines under Jim Harbaugh. McCarthy helped lead the Wolverines to a championship in his final year of college football. That season, he recorded 2,991 passing yards and 25 total touchdowns (22 passing) while owning an impressive 72.3% completion percentage (led the Big-Ten Conference in completion percentage that season). Related: Vikings give $23.25 million contract extension to J.J. McCarthy weapon Related: Justin Jefferson's important message to Vikings QB J.J. McCarthy

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store