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Enhanced Games: Fred Kerley wins 100m with 9.97 that would have seen him finish last at 2024 Olympics

Fred Kerley wins 100m with a 9.97 second time that would have seen him finish last at the 2024 Olympics; British swimmer Ben Proud finished .05s off the world record 50m butterfly time; Only one world record was broken across the weekend

Fred Kerley, of the United States, competes in the men's 100-meter final at the Enhanced Games in Las Vegas
Image: Fred Kerley, of the United States, competes in the men's 100m final at the Enhanced Games in Las Vegas

Fred Kerley ran 100 meters in a pedestrian 9.97 seconds to win the Enhanced Games - but that same time would have seen the former bronze medallist finish last at the 2024 Olympics.

Kerley, who predicted Usain Bolt's world record of 9.58 seconds would get "destroyed," won a race in which the sprinters had to be placed in the starting blocks four times because of false starts and untied shoes.

The only athlete to win the $1m bonus for going faster than the world record over the four hours of swimming, weightlifting and track in the specially built stadium on the Las Vegas Strip was Kristian Gkolomeev, who closed the night by swimming the 50m free in 20.81 seconds.

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Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, Lisa Nandy MP, said before the Enhanced Games she was 'unfazed' by them, focusing instead on 'clean sport'

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UK Anti-Doping Agency Chief Executive Jane Rumble criticised the Enhanced Games expressing her 'disappointment'

That record won't go into the books, however, because the Enhanced Games, true to its name, allows performance-enhancing drugs that are banned in mainstream sports.

The men's 50m freestyle world record of 20.88 seconds was set two months ago in a sanctioned event by Cameron McEvoy.

Marius Kusch, of Germany, competes in the men's 100-meter butterfly final
Image: Marius Kusch, of Germany, competed in the men's 100m butterfly final

Gkolomeev had also won a $1m bonus from Enhanced last year for swimming faster than the world record during a "trial."

The most iconic marks in Olympic sports, though, are in track, and when Kerley called out Bolt's 17-year-old record - but the vaunted 100m proved a messy event which didn't threaten the Jamaican's milstone.

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Kerley was in a line of six runners who had to be called out of the blocks three times - an energy sapper - first for a sprinter to re-tie his shoe, then twice more when the false-start signal went off, but early motion was, apparently, undetectable and nobody was disqualified.

Cody Miller, of the United States, celebrates after winning the men's 100-meter breaststroke final
Image: Cody Miller, of the United States, celebrates after winning the men's 100m breaststroke final

"A lot of false starts, a lot of jumping, a lot of people who didn't want to run their heats," Kerley said of the less-than-full field for a basically meaningless prelim race in which he false started but wasn't DQ'd. "Got to do better than that. I'm ready to run fast."

Kerley, who said he is not using performance enhancers, still pocketed $250,000 - the first-place prize for all the events.

Ben Proud will be taking part in The Enhanced Games
Image: British swimmer Ben Proud took part in The Enhanced Games

In all, Enhanced said there were 14 personal bests set by 12 athletes, all of them swimmers and weightlifters.

Among those who made runs at world marks was Ben Proud, the British Olympic silver medalist, who finished .05 off the 50m fly mark of 22.27.

"I think I am," he said when asked if he was happy after winning $250,000. "But I think we all know what we came here for, and that's a world record."