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Athletics can’t keep kidding itself – it needs a five-pronged plan to save track and field | Sean Ingle

about 11 hours ago
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The world’s fastest man is being trash-talked by a YouTuber,“Are you ready man?” asks Darren Watkins, AKA IShowSpeed, on a live stream broadcast around the world,“You know my name’s Speed, right? And you know I am going to win,” Noah Lyles, the Olympic and world 100m champion, smiles at the teenage upstart,Then he bites back.

“You gave yourself that name? That’s so cute.”The pair agree to race over 50m for $100,000.Speed confesses that he has never worn a pair of spikes before, but keeps telling his 43.8m followers that he can beat Lyles.As the pair line up, Speed does a backflip.

Then the YouTube megastar, Mr Beast, who has 431m followers, fires the starter’s gun.This isn’t track and field as we know it.But thousands of people are watching, commenting, waiting to see what happens.The result isn’t a surprise.But that hardly matters.

The 39-minute video of the encounter last November has now had 3.5m views on YouTube – making it by far the most watched athletics race on the platform since the 2024 Olympics.This had completely passed me by until a couple of days ago when the British 200m athlete Toby Harries mentioned it.We were discussing the state of athletics before the world championships starting this week in Tokyo, and Harries was arguing that Speed v Lyles had created more hype and drama – and had more views – than this year’s Diamond League.It sounds preposterous.

But Lyles’ 100m race in London has been viewed 137,000 times on YouTube.While perhaps the most thrilling race of 2025 – in which the young Dutch star Niels Laros comes from 50m back to win the Bowerman mile in Eugene, has just 5,700 views.“Athletics and athletes have a lot to learn,” says Harries, who posts regular training clips and insights to his 24,000 Instagram followers.“They come at the sport being like, ‘if I run fast, I get paid, and that’s all I need to do.’ Sadly, that’s not the reality of it any more.

”Call it the great athletics paradox.It is the most popular Olympic sport by far.Millions were transfixed by Lyles, Mondo Duplantis, Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, Keely Hodgkinson and Femke Bol in Paris.But in Tokyo only a fraction of those casual fans will be back – and it is not just because it is on the other side of the world.So what needs to change? Here is my five-point plan.

First, athletics can’t keep kidding itself.“It is not a dying sport,” says Stuart McMillan, a leading sprint coach who works with top athletes and NFL players.“But the authorities need to treat it as if it is.Because it’s trending in the wrong direction.“Everybody is making less money,” he says.

“There’s less eyeballs, sponsors and meets.Athletes, agents, meet directors, federations, and governing bodies all have a responsibility for this.There needs to be some sort of come to Jesus moment about the current state of the sport.”Second, athletes need to embrace the fact that they are entertainers.They are not just competing against their rivals but other sports and even Netflix for people’s attention and affection.

Jake Paul is far from the best boxer in the world but he is one of the richest.Why? Because he engages with young people, inspires love and hate, and makes people care.Third, athletics needs to find far better ways to appeal to Gen Z.Yes, Speed v Lyles was a gimmick.But it worked.

Could an England footballer beat Keely Hodgkinson over 800m? I doubt it.But I bet Trent Alexander-Arnold v Keely would get the kids watching.Ditto if Lyles raced the Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill.Some will scoff.But the athletics season runs from February to October.

It’s time to throw things against the wall to see what sticks,As the British 100m and 200m sprinter Amy Hunt puts it: “We speak about this all the time in groups, and I don’t think that every race should be 100% serious,What about having a man racing 150m and I’m doing 120m and see if he can catch me?”Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionFourth, TV still doesn’t capture just how fast, powerful or compelling athletes are,Use drones,Put cameras in the call room and in the warmup area.

Conduct interviews but make them less happy-clappy,Duplantis can vault way over the height of a doubledecker bus,Lyles can run at blurring speeds,But you don’t get that sense from television,Fifth, learn from how other sports attract young audiences.

Speak to Barry Hearn.Get 20 ideas from him and pick five that may work.“If you look at darts and MMA, that means gambling, drinking and having fun,” says Harries.“Those sports understand how to get people excited.”Athletics can do it – look at the Night of the 10K PBs, which attracts about 5,000 fans who stand on lane eight of the track while drinking beers and eating burgers.

Of course it would also help if high-profile athletes lined up against each other more often – something Michael Johnson’s Grand Slam Track tried to do before it fell apart in failure and recriminations, having not so far been able to pay its athletes.As McLaughlin-Levrone, the world 400m hurdles record holder and GST’s poster girl, said last week: “Yes, having exciting races is part of it, but I also think that if nobody can see those races.It doesn’t really help anybody.”Some athletes do get it.Jakob Ingebrigtsen announced he would be competing in Tokyo after injury with an Instagram video that painted him as a gambler rolling the dice.

The Olympic 200m champion, Gabby Thomas, has called for coaches who doped to be banned for life.Gout Gout, the astonishing 17-year-old Australian who could be the next Usain Bolt, brings new hope too.Fortunes can change.Formula One has shown that.It has gone from being a sport for old dads, to being huge with Gen Z and female fans.

A friend, who attends most races, talks of how on Thursdays teams all film silly clips in the paddock for social media.“F1 drivers understand they are like puppets but they get the game,” he says.There is a sense of a sport pulling together to wring every last eyeball and dollar from it, which athletics can learn from.As Hunt said last week: “Sometimes you have to bring the glitz into the sport if we want others to treat us like a glitzy sport.” And that means athletes supplying the razzle dazzle off the track as well as on it.

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‘The Mother Teresa of Aussie supermarkets’: meet the woman cataloguing grocery deals on TikTok

Maya Angelou once said “a hero is any person really intent on making this a better place for all people” and when she said that, I can only assume she had Australian TikToker and micro-influencer Tennilles_deals in mind.Who exactly is Tennilles_deals? Firstly, she’s the Mother Teresa of Aussie supermarkets. Secondly, I don’t know anything about her personally because this savvy queen doesn’t market herself like your average influencer. She lets her work speak for itself.The work in question? Weekly uploads of POV-style videos where Tennille meticulously goes through major supermarkets to show you what’s on special that week

2 days ago
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Drawings reveal Victorian proposal for London’s own Grand Central station

The vaulted arches of New York’s Grand Central station are recognisable even to those who have never taken a train into the Big Apple. But they could very easily have been a sight visible in central London.Shelved 172-year-old architectural drawings by Perceval Parsons show how he envisioned a new London railway connecting the growing number of lines coming into the city to a huge main terminal by the Thames.The drawings of London’s own Grand Central Station, which are being put on open sale for the first time to mark the 200th anniversary of the first public passenger railway, show a scheme that would have given the capital of the UK a very different look today.The station was to be located at Great Scotland Yard, close to the modern-day Embankment tube station, and would have boasted an ornamental frontage about 800ft (245 metres) in length

2 days ago
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Blur’s Dave Rowntree: ‘People think music was better in the old days, to which I say: bollocks!’

You’ve just put out a coffee table book of photographs of your early years with Blur. I imagine you didn’t have too many expectations at the time. Why had you stopped taking photos by the time the band blew up?I told myself that I was not experiencing life, that I was looking at it through the lens of the camera. But what really happened was, after a few years, things stopped being bright and shiny and new and exciting. It was pretty clear that we were going to have a career, that this wasn’t just a 15-minute Warholian burst of fame

3 days ago
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Gems review – dazzling technique elevates LA Dance Project’s contemporary ballet trilogy

Australia sees so little international contemporary dance – considered too far and too expensive a journey, with too small a dedicated dance audience to make it worthwhile. What does appear is mostly in Melbourne and Sydney. So it’s a curious coup for Brisbane festival to land the second visit to Australia by L.A. Dance Project – the troupe founded by the former New York City Ballet principal Benjamin Millepied – after the Sydney Opera House’s presentation of his contemporary, genderqueer Romeo and Juliet Suite last year

3 days ago
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The Guide #207: How Britain embraced The Simpsons, America’s true first family

Mum wouldn’t have Bart Simpson in our house. When, 35 years ago this month, The Simpsons first drifted across the Atlantic and on to UK screens, they brought with them a bad reputation. In the US, Matt Groening’s peerless animation had quickly become a ratings sensation after it debuted in 1989, but it was also a controversy magnet, particularly over its breakout delinquent star. The Simpsons was seen by the more conservative end of the US media as a bad influence on kids (a viewpoint famously echoed by President George HW Bush a few years later with his call for American families to be more like the Waltons and less like the Simpsons). Plenty of US schools banned a massive-selling T-shirt with Bart declaring himself an “underachiever and proud of it, man”

4 days ago
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From On Swift Horses to David Byrne: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

ChristyOut now Following a prize-winning premiere at the Berlinale, this Irish drama starring Danny Power has been feted as an auspicious feature debut for director Brendan Canty. Telling the tale of two estranged brothers in Knocknaheeny, Cork, it’s a social-realist breakout hit.On Swift HorsesOut now Muriel (Daisy Edgar-Jones) and Lee (Will Poulter) are newlyweds who move from Kansas to California in the 1950s, with Lee’s brother, Julius (Jacob Elordi). A bond emerges between Muriel and Julius – however, this isn’t a typical love triangle, but an exploration of same-sex attraction in a time and place where that could be life-threatening.The Conjuring: Last RitesOut now Something wicked this way comes: the ninth and (allegedly) final instalment of the Conjuring franchise, based on the (alleged) exploits of paranormal experts Lorraine and Ed Warren, played by Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson, who are investigating the Smurl hauntings of Pennsylvania

4 days ago
societySee all
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Tanni Grey-Thompson received ‘abusive’ emails over opposition to assisted dying bill

1 day ago
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Don’t leave social care out of the equation | Letters

2 days ago
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Women in UK with polycystic ovarian syndrome facing widespread failures in treatment, report finds

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Emergency alert: millions of UK mobile phones to receive test message on Sunday

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A new dream man has dropped – the laid-back, confident beefcake | Emma Beddington

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Private menopause tests risk undermining NHS care, doctors say

3 days ago