Noah Lyles and Femke Bol both delivered statement performances ahead of the Olympic Games in Paris on a day of world leads and broken records at the tenth Wanda Diamond League meeting of the season in London on Saturday.
At a meeting with a sell-out crowd of almost 60,000 people, Dutch star Bol kicked off the afternoon with a Diamond League record of 51.30 in the women's 400m hurdles, before Lyles saw off fellow Olympic medal hopefuls with a personal best in the 100m.
One week after breaking her own European record in the 400m hurdles, Bol returned to the scene of one of her previous European record-breaking performances and produced the second-fastest time of her career.
Rushell Clayton matched Bol through the first half, but the world champion pulled away over the final 200 metres to win comfortably in 51.30 – a 0.15 improvement on the Diamond League record she set at this meeting last year. Shamier Little came through to take second spot in 52.78 ahead of Clayton (53.24).
"I truly love running here in this stadium," said Bol. "I'm excited for Paris and I'm looking forward to racing Sydney (McLaughlin-Levrone, the world record-holder and defending Olympic champion). I will be ready for it."
Like Bol, Nickisha Pryce and Matt Hudson-Smith also displayed sensational form over a lap of the track at the London Athletics Meet. Pryce also set a Diamond League record in the 400m flat, while Hudson-Smith smashed his own European record in the men’s 400m.
Pryce, who had won the NCAA title last month in a Jamaican record of 48.89, was making her Diamond League debut but clearly wasn’t intimidated by the occasion. Lieke Klaver of the Netherlands led to half way, as she often does. But Pryce kicked hard coming off the final bend and pulled away from European champion Natalia Kaczmarek, charging through the line in 48.57.
Not only is that mark a Diamond League record – bettering the 48.97 set by Shaunae Miller-Uibo in Monaco exactly six years ago to the day – it also elevates Pryce to seventh on the world all-time list, ahead of the likes of Cathy Freeman and Sanya Richards-Ross.
Kaczmarek crossed the line in second in 48.90, taking 0.08 off the Polish record she set at the European Championships and marking just the seventh time in history in which two women have bettered 49 seconds in the same race.
Klaver (49.58), Amber Anning (49.63) and Laviai Nielsen (49.87) also finished inside 50 seconds.
Hudson-Smith extended his winning streak in the men’s 400m, producing a run that strengthens his status as a gold medal contender heading into the Olympics.
The world silver medallist led from the outset and opened up a significant gap over USA’s Vernon Norwood and Jereem Richards to win in 43.74, becoming the first European man to run inside 44 seconds and moving to 12th on the world all-time list.
Norwood (44.10), Richards (44.20) and Charlie Dobson (44.23) were all rewarded with PBs. Kirani James – who won Olympic gold on this track 12 years ago – was fifth in a season’s best of 44.38.