Noah Lyles explains why he competed with COVID-19 at Paris Olympics

Noah Lyles collapsed on the track after the Olympic 200m final before his COVID status was confirmed

Noah Lyles explains why he competed with COVID-19 at Paris Olympics

Joel Omotto 11:13 - 27.08.2024

The American sprinter has revealed what pushed him to run the 200m final at the Paris Olympics despite testing positive for COVID-19.

Olympics 100m champion Noah Lyles says his desire to want to win everything is what pushed him to compete in the 200m final despite having tested positive for COVID-19.

After claiming gold in 100m, Lyles looked in good spirits ahead of the 200m final but lost to Botswana’s Letsile Tebogo with fellow American Kenny Bednarek finishing second as he settled for bronze a medal.

There was a moment when Lyles lied on the track for a while after the race before he was taken away on a wheelchair, later revealing he was suffering from COVID-19.

It raised questions at to why Lyles was allowed to compete after testing positive for the virus as it would endanger his competitors but the sprinter has given an account of how it happened.

“The only thing that would stop me was the rules, we were in a situation where as a competitor, I am thinking I only have one shot and nothing is promised tomorrow and I worked so hard to get to today so if it is in the ability to happen, I am going to take it,” Lyles told Access Hollywood.

“The rules are very clear, if you have a fever, you are not allowed to compete but I did not have a fever. I walked into a hotel, the doctors checked on me every hour, I was given tons of medication which I figured out is very expensive.

“It quickly gets rid of most of the symptoms and it shows the amount of time that you have COVID so I was very shocked on how active it was but still, you cannot take care of everything.

“Even leading up to the medal ceremony, I asked the athletes if they were comfortable and the people presenting the medals if they were comfortable with me coming because I did not a situation where everybody felt uneasy and it ruins their Olympics moment.”

Lyles then revealed how he contemplated pulling out of the 200m race after his diagnosis before he summoned enough strength to realize his desire of winning more.

“I told my therapist; ‘at the end of this race, if I have not passed out on the floor then I do not feel that I gave enough’. I knew I would have to give everything to obtain at least one or any medal and I am extremely impressed with myself,” he added.

“At some moment, I thought it was over and I contemplated I could stop because I had done enough but I knew to myself that I would not be okay with saying that because of the younger me that said I want everything.”