Noah Lyles wants 'millions of dollars,' no 'gimmicks' to race Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill

Noah Lyles is game to race Tyreek Hill.

But he's not doing it for cheap. And he's doing it only under his rules.

The three-time Olympic medalist and 100-meter gold medalist at the Paris Games responded Wednesday to Hill's latest challenge to a foot race.

“I mean, if somebody wants to sponsor the event, and we’re racing for millions of dollars, and it’s on a track, and we’re running 100 meters, then sure, we can race,” Lyles told NBC News.

“But it has to be legit, I’m not here to do gimmicks. You’re racing against a guy who has worked his whole life to get the title of the world’s fastest man, and you’ve worked to be a great football player. You can’t just jump the line because you’re a great football player.”

Hill is widely viewed as the fastest player in the NFL. The Miami Dolphins wide receiver has generated plenty of headlines throughout his career by challenging the likes of Terrell Owens, Aaron Jones and others to races. He has also experienced recent success on the track with a 2023 win in 60 meters at the USA Track & Field Masters (25 to 29 years old division).

Noah Lyles celebrates his Olympic gold medal in Paris. (Photo by Martin Bernetti / AFP)
Noah Lyles celebrates his Olympic gold medal in Paris. (Photo by Martin Bernetti / AFP) (MARTIN BERNETTI via Getty Images)

Now he wants to race the unofficial world's fastest man — or so he claims. Hill and Lyles have engaged in a somewhat contentious back-and-forth in the media about a race since Lyles' Olympic gold run on Aug. 4. Hill's latest shot arrived on social media Sunday, when he challenged Lyles to commit to a 50-yard sprint.

"Sign the contract and lock in that 50-yard race," Hill wrote.

That was in response to Lyles telling Shannon Sharpe that "Tyreek is just chasing clout."

"If he's serious about it ... you'll see me on the track," Lyles told Sharpe last week on his "Nightcap" podcast.

That's where things stand, which begs the question: Is this race actually going to happen?

It's unlikely. Hill is in the midst of training camp and isn't likely to get the green light from the Dolphins to risk injury by running in extracurricular activities.

Also, Hill doesn't stand a reasonable chance — especially within the 100-meter parameter Lyles has set. Hill, who ran track at Oklahoma State, undeniably possesses elite speed. But football speed and track speed are two separate entities.

Hill's 6.70 time in 60 meters smoked the field in his age bracket at the 2023 USATF Masters. It qualified as the 213th-fastest time in the world in 2023.

Hill's best official time in the 100 meters is 10.19 seconds. Lyles secured gold with a time of 9.79 seconds in Paris. There's no comparing what Lyles does on the track to what Hill does on the football field.

U.S. track legend Michael Johnson laid the disparity out in bare terms after Hill raced at the 2023 USATF Masters.

Hill surely understands the realities here. Does he really want to risk almost certain embarrassment on track, or is this all bluster to keep in the headlines? The latter is almost certainly the case.

But on Wednesday, Lyles brought up the one point that could make this a reality: "if somebody wants to sponsor the event, and we’re racing for millions of dollars."

If there is a sponsor willing to pay both athletes millions of dollars to run 100 meters, who would say no to that?

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