
Lyles Sets 150m World Best as Gout Rebounds and Portillo Soars in Ostrava
Noah Lyles clocked 14.67 seconds over the rarely run 150 metres, while Australian teen Gout Gout seized a national record and Mexico’s Erick Portillo won the high jump, as an Iranian freestyler separately entered Guinness lore.
The Ostrava Golden Spike meeting in Czechia produced a world best over the unconventional 150-metre distance on Tuesday, as American Olympic champion Noah Lyles blazed to 14.67 seconds. The time, which shaved a quarter of a second off the mark set by Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson in April, underlined Lyles’s range beyond his customary 100m and 200m dominance. South Africa’s Sinesipho Dambile crossed in 14.78, also inside the previous best, while Australian prodigy Gout Gout stopped the clock at 14.96 — a personal best and national record that signalled a sharp recovery from a disappointing Diamond League debut in Oslo only days earlier.
Viewed from Sydney, Gout’s third-place finish carried weight beyond the numbers. The 18-year-old, who earlier this year ran 19.67 seconds over 200m to set an under-20 world record faster than Usain Bolt’s best at the same age, had looked adrift in the Norwegian capital. In Ostrava, however, he held his form through the finish, telling Australian media he was “ready for more” after a race that restored his momentum ahead of a season that could reshape sprinting’s generational hierarchy.
Mexico City observers, meanwhile, celebrated Erick Portillo’s high jump victory at the same meet. The 25-year-old indoor world silver medallist cleared 2.27 metres to claim his second Continental Tour Gold win of the campaign, beating Czech home favourite Jan Štefela. Portillo’s consistency on the circuit positions him as a credible podium threat when the outdoor World Championships return to the calendar.
In a separate but equally striking feat of athletic precision, Iranian freestyler Maryam Nikbakht secured a Guinness World Record for the most football touches with the shin in 60 seconds — 230, obliterating the previous mark of 151 held by an Australian. Hailing from Shahindezh in West Azerbaijan province, Nikbakht, who holds a master’s degree in physical education, already owned Iranian and Asian endurance records for keepie-uppies lasting over seven hours. Her achievement, though far from the track, reflects a broadening global appetite for record-breaking as a form of sporting expression.
Analysts in London note that Lyles’s 150m world best, while not an official World Athletics event, reinforces his claim as the most versatile male sprinter of his era. For Gout, the Ostrava run offers a template: a solid start and a sustained drive phase can keep him in the frame against the world’s elite. Portillo’s steady rise adds depth to a high jump scene long dominated by a handful of nations. And Nikbakht’s Guinness entry, however niche, illustrates that the pursuit of the extraordinary now transcends traditional arenas, linking a Czech track, an Iranian training ground, and a global audience hungry for firsts.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Noah Lyles shattered the 150m world best with 14.67 seconds, while Australian teen Gout Gout rebounded to set a personal best and national record of 14.96, finishing third. The race was a showcase of elite sprinting and mutual respect, with both athletes celebrating together.
Mexican high jumper Erick Portillo soared to victory with a spectacular 2.27-meter leap at the Ostrava Golden Spike, securing his second major win of the season. The world indoor silver medalist dominated the field, leaving Czech Jan Stefela with the silver medal.
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