EUGENE, Ore.—As another Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone moment drew closer Sunday, anticipation shooting skyward and suspense focused not on her race but on its time clock, the hurdler huddled one final time with her coach. There wasn’t much left to say, not then, as she warmed up.In a race where winning didn’t matter much, where a top-three finish would guarantee a trip to the Paris Olympics, McLaughlin-Levrone meant she would start as fast as she possibly could.
Makes sense, actually, because there’s something to the formula. Something that bends one race, in one place—and the woman who continues to conquer both, while changing what’s believed to be possible in her event—toward spectacular. The particular thing is always different, but that’s the thing about McLaughlin-Levrone, 400-meter hurdles finals and the track at Hayward Field.
There’s no other way to explain this series of moments. Forget the tower that forms the signature of America’s lone track stadium. Nothing and no one towers above McLaughlin-Levrone. She’s pushing track, its history and things like physics beyond where anyone thought possible.
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