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Swimming South Africa, Judge Debate Merits Of Case Against SA Water Polo In Latest Hearing

It appears that it wasn’t a good day in court for Swimming South Africa last week as it continue to take legal action against the newly formed South African Water Polo (SA Water Polo). Contradictory statements and back-and-forth arguments with Judge Judith Cloete seemed to dominate the latest hearing in the case, according to South […]

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It appears that it wasn’t a good day in court for Swimming South Africa last week as it continue to take legal action against the newly formed South African Water Polo (SA Water Polo).

Contradictory statements and back-and-forth arguments with Judge Judith Cloete seemed to dominate the latest hearing in the case, according to South African newspaper Daily Maverick.

Swimming SA is seeking a cease-and-desist application against SA Water Polo to stop if from existing. SA Water polo was launched in March with the intention of assuming governance to revitalize the sport, but not to fully break away from Swimming SA.  A final decision in the case might take as long as three months.

Appearing in front of Judge Cloete on May 21, Swimming SA conceded that SA Water Polo didn’t need its consent to exist, which contradicted an original argument for an interdict against the water polo body.

Swimming SA has contended that it should be the only recognized national aquatics body in the country, and argued in court that SA Water Polo was trying to become a national federation.

Law in South Africa states that there can be only one national federation, but there can be several national bodies. Judge Cloete said that SA Water polo never purported to be a national federation, only a national body.

Swimming SA later conceded that SA Water Polo was a parallel body not passing itself off as the administrator of the sport.

“Given Swimming SA’s acceptance of SA Water Polo as a national body, why then was Swimming SA asking for an interdict against SA Water Polo if it recognized its right to exist?” Judge Cloete asked in the hearing.

Swimming SA argued that SA Water Polo interfered with SA’s governance by recruiting water polo members to join SA Water Polo.

Judge Cloete later said that no specific evidence had been provided by Swimming SA on why members had left, so SA Water Polo couldn’t be blamed.

Swimming SA also attempted to argue merits for SA Water Polo’s future application for membership into World Aquatics, but Judge Cloete ruled it wasn’t relevant to the current court case and that World Aquatics would have to decide on the application.

In November, a faction of SA Water Polo started a movement to break off from Swimming SA, citing poor treatment of the sport and its members, including not allowing the men’s and women’s water polo teams to compete at the Paris Olympics.

The teams met the World Aquatics qualification criteria as the highest-ranked African team, but Swimming SA had an internal criteria of finishing in the top 12 at the World Championships, which neither team achieved.

The faction shared a document listing grievances with Swimming SA, such as a lack of financial support and little water polo representation in decision-making.

The faction had opposition from within the water polo community, especially players who were worried about missed career opportunities.

 





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2-sport North Allegheny star excited to play college ball at Drake

Whether he was defending passes in football or soaring through the air in track, Nick Humphries left his mark at North Allegheny. Now he’s ready to make the leap all the way to Des Moines, Iowa. The 2025 NA graduate departed in late June for Drake, where he will begin preparation for his first year […]

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Whether he was defending passes in football or soaring through the air in track, Nick Humphries left his mark at North Allegheny.

Now he’s ready to make the leap all the way to Des Moines, Iowa.

The 2025 NA graduate departed in late June for Drake, where he will begin preparation for his first year with the Division I FCS football program.

“I’m very excited,” Humphries said. “It’s a new chapter in my life. Closing this one and opening a new one is always good. As a young kid, I always had a dream to play Division I football. This is very big for me, so I’m excited.”

Humphries, who was part of WPIAL champion teams in football and track, was set to leave for Drake on June 26 to start orientation, move into his dorm room and begin summer conditioning.

A lot has changed since Humphries, a 6-foot, 170-pound two-time all-conference defensive back, committed to Drake in October. Former Bulldogs coach Todd Stepsis departed in early December for Northern Iowa, and Joe Woodley, who had led crosstown Grand View to the 2024 NAIA national championship, was hired at Drake on
Dec. 23.

While all of the coaches who had recruited Humphries are gone, he didn’t waver in his commitment to the school.

“When I first heard the news, I was kind of shocked,” he said, “but at the same time, I was firm in my decision with Drake. In my household, academics always come first. Drake has excellent academics. … I knew they were getting good coaches, so it wasn’t really a problem for me.”

Humphries, who carried a 3.5 GPA at North Allegheny, earned an academic scholarship to Drake and plans to major in data analytics at the 4,800-student school. The Bulldogs play in the Pioneer Football League, the only nonscholarship, football-only conference in the FCS. The lone other WPIAL product on the roster is former Canon-McMillan defensive back Chris Davis Jr.

Humphries had attended a football camp at Drake last summer and been offered — his first Division I deal — shortly afterward. He had also looked at Robert Morris and Howard.

“The reason why I picked Drake was, first and foremost, academics,” said “They have very good academics. I liked the people around there. They were very welcoming, and I liked the community and the environment. It was very nice.”

Humphries had a nice career at North Allegheny, lettering four times in track and twice in football.

He led the WPIAL Class 6A runner-up Tigers with 11 pass breakups and returned two punts for touchdowns in his senior football season.

This past spring, he finished third in the long jump at the WPIAL Class 3A Track and Field Championships and anchored the fourth-place 400 relay team that broke a 46-year-old school record with a time of 42.37 seconds.

He also placed second in the long jump at the Baldwin Invitational with a personal-best leap of 23 feet, 3 inches, one of the best marks in school history by anyone not named Ayden Owens.

NA track coach John Neff said Humphries was much more than just a football player using track season to stay in shape.

“Football is definitely his No. 1 sport, but he attacks track and field as if it were his No. 1 sport, too,” Neff said. “He was a great teammate, and he was really interested in the team’s success. I couldn’t have asked for any more out of him.”

Humphries’ track days are over; he’s football-only at Drake. He said the new coaching staff has reached out, and he was encouraged by what he heard from cornerbacks coach Jacob Brown and safeties coach AJ Vasquez.

“They’ve been calling me, texting me and keeping me up to date,” Humphries said. “It’s going good, and I’m very excited to get there and start my new journey, my new chapter, and see how it goes.”

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John Chaplin, WSU’s winningest coach ever, is pushing 90 and fired up as ever

John Chaplin, a giant in U.S. track history, is surrounded by gardens and artwork in retirement at home between Pullman and Palouse, Wash. (Photo: Cougfan.com/Witter) STEP INSIDE JOHN CHAPLIN’S world, and you quickly realize you’re not in a typical home. The walls are adorned with art collected from around the world, including woodcuts by his father, an internationally […]

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John Chaplin, a giant in U.S. track history, is surrounded by gardens and artwork in retirement at home between Pullman and Palouse, Wash. (Photo: Cougfan.com/Witter)

STEP INSIDE JOHN CHAPLIN’S world, and you quickly realize you’re not in a typical home. The walls are adorned with art collected from around the world, including woodcuts by his father, an internationally acclaimed artist. His den is filled with hundreds of books curated by an intellect … the Harvard Classics, the complete works of Spinoza, 15 volumes of the Catholic Encyclopedia, and the book he believes is the finest of the 20th century, Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond.

The books share space with an eclectic liquor collection befitting a world traveler of discriminating taste. Chaplin holds a soft spot for Vintage Port, with Hungarian Tokaji and Lemon Grand Marnier from Argentina not far behind. 

The 2.5-acre Chaplin spread sits about seven miles outside of Pullman, off Highway 27, on the way to Palouse. Inside and out, the place is almost as interesting as the man himself. 

“As you can tell, this is where I belong,” Chaplin said in conversations with Cougfan.com over the last month-and-a-half. “This den is the 14th century without the TV set. This is a library den with a bar and that’s the best liquor collection in Eastern Washington.”

To talk with John Chaplin is to enter a place where history, philosophy, and blunt honesty matter more than any medal ever could. Asked about the news earlier this month that WSU is paring its track and field program down to just distance running, he delivers in straight-forward fashion.

“As an alumni who coached here for many years and led the program to worldwide success, WSU has delivered a strong message to current athletes, past athletes and coaches: you don’t give a damn. There are many ways to adjust budgets without throwing in the towel,” he said.

“To drop a bomb like this in the dark of night and then run off and hide from questions the media is asking is embarrassing. And the kids didn’t even find out from the athletic director — an associate AD, who couldn’t tell you if a track is pumped or stuffed, was sent.”

Efforts by Cougfan.com to reach WSU AD Anne McCoy and track coach Wayne Phipps for insight beyond the five-sentence June 16 press release announcing the gutting of the program have so far been unsuccessful.

CHAPLIN’S SPIRIT AND ENERGY, nearly nine decades in, suggest but one thought about the younger Chaplin who built a juggernaut on the Palouse: he must have been a perpetual motion machine.

In Man of the Oval: The International Legacy of John Chaplin and WSU Track & Field — the page-turning book about Chaplin that came out in 2023 — Chaplin recounts asking the doctor how his blood pressure was stacking up. The doctor replied, “Hell, John, you don’t have high blood pressure. You give it.”

Chaplin, 88, spends much of his time today reading and writing. Asked how he stays fit, he fires back, “Are you crazy? I don’t believe in physical exercise. As a former quarter-miler, I say anyone who runs more than one lap is missing their hole card.”

From 1965 with Gerry Lindgren to 1999 with Bernard Lagat, Washington State University was a world power in track and field, and Chaplin was part of all but a handful of those 34 years. In 1968 the legendary Jack Mooberry hired him as an assistant track and field coach and cross country head coach. For 21 years, from 1973-94, Chaplin ran the whole show and the results were downright storybook.

And it was storybook in colorful fashion. Chaplin was a walking quote factory and his recruiting — built on in-staters, walk ons and a marvelous array of international athletes — was nothing short of head turning.

When opposing coaches grumbled about his international pipeline, Chaplin ringed Mooberry Field with flagpoles flying the colors of every nation represented by his Cougars. By the time he retired in 1994, 31 different flags had flown at the track.



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Colorado Buffaloes Snubbed In EA College Football’s Top 25 Rankings?

The Colorado Buffaloes are not ranked in the top 25 of the new EA Sports College Football 26 video game. Last season, Colorado finished with a record in the regular season of 9-3. They earned a trip to the Alamo Bowl, where they lost to the BYU Cougars.  The Buffaloes finished ranked No. 23 in […]

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The Colorado Buffaloes are not ranked in the top 25 of the new EA Sports College Football 26 video game. Last season, Colorado finished with a record in the regular season of 9-3. They earned a trip to the Alamo Bowl, where they lost to the BYU Cougars. 

The Buffaloes finished ranked No. 23 in the College Football Playoff rankings, No. 25 in the Coaches Poll, and No. 25 in the AP Poll. 

Apr 19, 2025; Boulder, CO, USA; Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders and place kicker Buck Buchanan (43) during the sp

Apr 19, 2025; Boulder, CO, USA; Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders and place kicker Buck Buchanan (43) during the spring game at Folsom Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images / Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

Colorado will have a new look team on the field next year and College Football 26 doesn’t think they will be as good as they were in 2024. The Buffaloes will be without their two best players from the past two seasons in quarterback Shedeur Sanders and wide receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter. Sanders won 2024 Big 12 Offensive Player of of the Year while Hunter was named the 2024 Heisman trophy winner. Both are now in the NFL. 

However, Colorado coach Deion Sanders is going nowhere. Coach Prime will be entering his third year as coach in Boulder. This rankings snub can be used as extra motivation for his team in 2025.

Apr 4, 2025; Boulder, CO, USA; Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders speaks to the media at the University of Colorado

Apr 4, 2025; Boulder, CO, USA; Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders speaks to the media at the University of Colorado NFL Showcase at the CU Indoor Practice Facility. Mandatory Credit: Michael Ciaglo-Imagn Images / Michael Ciaglo-Imagn Images

The Colorado Buffaloes are not one of the top 25 team in the College Football 26 video game. Here is the complete top 25:

1. Alabama Crimson Tide 

2. Texas Longhorns

3. Ohio State Buckeyes 

4. Penn State Nittany Lions

5. Notre Dame Fighting Irish

6. Georgia Bulldogs

7. Clemson Tigers

8. Texas A&M Aggies

9. Oregon Ducks

10. LSU Tigers

11. Miami Hurricanes 

12. Florida Gators

13. Texas Tech Red Raiders

14. Arizona State Sun Devils

15. Michigan Wolverines

16. Ole Miss Rebels

17. Oklahoma Sooners

18. Indiana Hoosiers

19. SMU Mustangs

20. Tennessee Volunteers

201. Missouri Tigers

22. Auburn Tigers

23. Duke Blue Devils

24. South Carolina Gamecocks 

25. Illinois Fighting Illini

MORE: Deion Sanders’ Colorado Buffaloes With Toughest Schedule In College Football?

MORE: Deion Sanders Battling Health Issues, Thankful For ‘Son’ Visit While Away From Colorado Buffaloes

MORE: Colorado Buffaloes Flip 4-Star Cornerback Recruit As Deion Sanders Finds Momentum

Not only is Colorado not in the top 25, the Big 12 conference as a whole is not well represented. There are only two Big 12 teams and none are in the top 12; Texas Tech at No. 13 and Arizona State at No. 14. 

A notable snub in addition to Colorado are the Iowa State Cyclones. Iowa State played in the Big 12 Championship game last season and finished with a record of 11-3.

Texas Tech's Jacob Rodriguez rushes Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders in a Big 12 football game Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024, at

Texas Tech’s Jacob Rodriguez rushes Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders in a Big 12 football game Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024, at Jones AT&T Stadium. / Stephen Garcia/Avalanche-Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Here is the conference breakdowns in the top 25:

SEC: 12 teams (No. 1 Alabama, No. 2 Texas, No. 6 Georgia, No. 8 Texas A&M, No. 10 LSU, No. 12 Florida, No. 16 Ole Miss, No. 17 Oklahoma, No. 20 Tennessee, No. 21 Missouri, No. 22 Auburn, No. 24 South Carolina)

Big Ten: 6 teams (No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Penn State, No. 9 Oregon, No. 15 Michigan, No. 18 Indiana, No. 25. Illinois)

ACC: 4 teams (No. 7 Clemson, No. 11 Miami, No. 19 SMU, No. 23 Duke)

Big 12: 2 teams (No. 13 Texas Tech, No. 14 Arizona State)

Independent: 1 team (No. 5 Notre Dame) 





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Mozingo Lake celebrates 30th Anniversary

The City of Maryville is celebrating the 30th anniversary of Mozingo Lake Recreation Park with an Independence Day celebration Friday, July 4 and Saturday, July 5. On July 4, there is an All Day Hole-In-One Contest at the Sechrest 18 Golf Course. Saturday, July 5 events start off at 8 am with the Optimist Club […]

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The City of Maryville is celebrating the 30th anniversary of Mozingo Lake Recreation Park with an Independence Day celebration Friday, July 4 and Saturday, July 5.

On July 4, there is an All Day Hole-In-One Contest at the Sechrest 18 Golf Course.

Saturday, July 5 events start off at 8 am with the Optimist Club Youth Fishing Tournament located at the City Boat Ramp. There are two age divisions: birth to 10 years-old and 11 to 15 years-old. Registration begins at 8 am, fishing starts at 8:30 am and ends at 11 am. First place goes to the biggest fish, second place goes to the most fish and third place goes to the smallest fish. Worms are provided and there is free Kool Kats.

•The Watson 9 golf course adult and youth scramble starts at 9 am.

• The beach party is at 11 am with activities including free pizza, DJ Hendrix, foam cannon, sand volleyball free-play and water guns.

• The Mega Pong tournament is at noon at the Visitor’s Center patio.

• Activities at “The Point” beginning at 4 pm include free face painting, cornhole freeplay, bounce houses, food trucks and Mozingo Bingo starts at 5 pm.

• Live music by Jimmy Harris starts at 7 pm.

• At dusk there will be the fireworks display.





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Big four book quarter-final spots with ease on third day of Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships

Greece maintained their perfect record after beating Germany on day three of the U16 European Championships in Istanbul. Photo: Nikola Krstic/European Aquatics Spain, Hungary, Greece and Italy all marched into the quarter-finals by landing big wins on the last day of the Group Stage at the Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships in Istanbul on […]

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Greece maintained their perfect record after beating Germany on day three of the U16 European Championships in Istanbul. Photo: Nikola Krstic/European Aquatics

Spain, Hungary, Greece and Italy all marched into the quarter-finals by landing big wins on the last day of the Group Stage at the Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships in Istanbul on Sunday.

Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships
Day 3 Results
– Istanbul, Türkiye
Sunday 29 June 2025

Group A

Spain 20-8 Serbia
Hungary 18-5 Netherlands

Standings: 1. Spain 9pts, 2. Hungary 6pts, 3. Netherlands 3pts, 4. Serbia 0pts

Group B

Greece 26-4 Germany
Italy 24-9 Croatia

Standings: 1. Greece 9pts, 2. Italy 6pts, 3. Germany 3pts, 4. Croatia 0pts

Group C

Czechia 6-4 Slovakia
Türkiye 15-10 France

Standings: 1. Türkiye 9pts, 2. Czechia 6pts, 3. France 3pts, 4. Slovakia 0pts

Group D

Romania 12-14 Ukraine

Standings: 1. Romania 3pts, 2. Ukraine 3pts, 3. Malta 3pts

Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships
Day 4 Crossover Fixtures
– Istanbul, Türkiye
Monday 30 June 2025
(Local times shown)

15:00: Serbia v Türkiye
16:30: Netherlands v Czechia
18:00: Croatia v Romania
19:30: Germany v Ukraine

Spain also made it three wins from three as they eased past Serbia on the final day of the Group Stage. Photo: Nikola Krstic/European Aquatics

Greece made few mistakes in their clash with Germany – in fact they had virtually wrapped up the win in eight minutes as they rallied to a 6-0 lead against the Germans, who could only hit their first goals in the middle of the second period at 8-0. All the Greek outfield players managed to score and nine of them finished with at least two goals.

Italy followed them into the quarter-finals shortly after. The Croats, perhaps still in shock after losing to Germany a day earlier, were down by five after just four minutes. The half-time score says it all, 14-3, and it didn’t look much better at the end.

In Group A, Spain did a clean job against the Serbs. A very strong first half, ending in a 13-3 rout, did the damage, but the second half was a bit more balanced as the tournament favourites cleared the first hurdle flawlessly winning three out of three.

Second place and the other quarter-final berth was at stake in the match between Hungary and the Netherlands. While at senior level this is usually a great battle, here it was a lopsided contest right from the beginning.

The Magyars stormed to a 6-0 lead which determined the rest of the game. The gap grew somewhat slower in the following periods, but the Hungarians’ superiority was never in question. They booked their place in the quarters while the Dutch will have to play in Monday’s crossovers.

In the second division, there were a lot more excitements on Day 3, with a fierce battle of neighbours’ kicking off the day as Czechia and Slovakia staged a memorable showdown.

The Slovaks fought hard and took a slender 0-2 lead by half-time, but their efforts took a toll as they were tiring as more and more exclusions were called against them. The Czechs took advantage in the third and finally broke the ice after a lengthy 20:11 minutes and they added another goal from extra 34 seconds from time to make it 2-2.

Slovakia hit back with a double in 67 seconds in the fourth, however, these were the only goals they could score in the entire second half – while their arch-rivals could level again with 3:37 to go.

The Slovaks missed a crucial six on five at 4-4 and an action goal from Ludmila Chlupsova put the Czechs ahead for the first time in the match with 1:53 remaining and they secured the comeback win with another six on five hit 35 seconds from time.

Their rank depended on the result in the last match between Türkiye and France. After the host nation continued their fine form in Istanbul with another victory, it meant Czechia secured the second spot and a place in the crossovers.

So far, it’s been a tournament to remember for the Türks, as they maintained their winning streak with relative ease. Captain Eda Moroglu fired in five times against the French, with four of them penalties, while Mina Bozkurt hit six.

In the crossovers on Monday, Türkiye will face Serbia, and an expectant crowd will once again fill the arena to see if they can reach the last eight.

Group D didn’t lack dramatic scenes either, as Romania and Ukraine played a back-and-forth game where the lead changed hands constantly.

Early in the third, the Romanians led 9-7, but their opponents hit three in a row in 78 seconds. Viktoriia Rudnyk’s last-gasp goal then gave Ukraine a 10-11 lead at the end of the third and they managed to stay in front throughout the fourth, which sent them to the crossovers, at the expense of Malta.

After their four-goal defeat to Romania on day one, the Maltese dropped to last place in a three-way tie.

Ukraine moved up to second in Group D after they downed Romania. Photo: Nikola Krstic/European Aquatics

Watch all the action live for free on the European Aquatics TV channel, which can be found by clicking here. For the full results/tables and schedule, click here.

Gergely Csurka for European Aquatics



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Tyreek Hill vs. Noah Lyles race would be entertaining, not competitive

Greg Olsen expresses excitement for upcoming Olympic flag football Former TE Greg Olsen is excited for some NFL players to showcase their skills in the upcoming 2028 Summer Olympics and the debut of flag football. Sports Seriously A few days after Xavier Worthy broke the NFL combine 40-yard dash record, USA TODAY Sports sarcastically asked […]

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A few days after Xavier Worthy broke the NFL combine 40-yard dash record, USA TODAY Sports sarcastically asked the then-draft prospect if he thought he could beat Usain Bolt in the 40-yard dash.

Bolt, the former Jamaican track and field superstar, eight-time Olympic gold medalist, and 100- and 200-meter world-record holder, effortlessly ran a 4.22 in the 40-yard dash in sweats and sneakers at the NFL Experience in 2019.

Worthy clocked in with an NFL combine record-setting time of 4.21 at the 2024 NFL scouting combine.

“No,” Worthy answered when asked if he could beat Bolt. “His 40 was in shoes and sweats. There’s no comparison. I’m not even gonna disrespect him.”

Worthy’s honest assessment applies to Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill, too.

Hill and Olympic 100-meter champion Noah Lyles have playfully gone back and forth about competing against each other in a race. Their scheduled race was canceled in June due to what Lyles described as “complications” and “personal reasons.”

The race would’ve been good publicity for both athletes and brought more casual fans to the sport of track and field. But let’s stop the charade. Hill is not in the same league as Lyles or any world-class sprinter when it comes to speed.

Hill did beat Lyles’ younger brother, Josephus, in a 100 prelim at the ATX Sprint Classic on Saturday with a wind-aided time of 10.10. Hill conveniently elected not to run in the final, where the top five finishers all ran sub-10 seconds (all times were wind-aided).

Hill, who competed in track and field in college, has a personal best legal time of 10.15 seconds in the 100 meters. The Dolphins wideout would’ve placed ninth at the 2024 U.S. Olympic track and field trials if he equaled his record.

Hill’s top mark in the 60 is 6.64. His record in the 60 would’ve been good enough for eighth in the event at the 2025 U.S. Indoor track and field championships.

Noah won a gold medal in the 100 at the Paris Olympics with a personal-best of 9.79. His lifetime best in the 60 is 6.43. Both times are comfortably ahead of Hill’s all-time best marks.

Furthermore, Noah’s 10 best times in the 100 are sub-9.90. His top 10 times in the 60 are all 6.55 or better. All of which are faster than Hill’s lifetime best in both events.

The times don’t lie. They reveal the obvious truth.

Yes, the Noah Lyles vs. Tyreek Hill showdown would’ve been entertaining for sports fans. They are two of the biggest stars in their respective sports. But it wouldn’t have been a competitive race.

Hill is arguably the fastest person in the NFL (although Worthy might have something to say about that). Lyles currently holds the title of the fastest man in the world, having won the Olympic gold medal in the 100. They are marquee athletes, but there’s a distinct difference between football speed and world-class track speed.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.





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