EUGENE — The penultimate day of the U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Track & Field Saturday afternoon at Hayward Field kept the large crowd on its feet with a combination of top-notch performances across the disciplines that included a meet record in the men's 200 and the deepest field ever in the men's discus. Completing the sprint double after winning the men's 100 earlier this week, three-time world 200 champion and American record holder Noah Lyles added the Trials record to his trophy case with a majestic 19.53 that established a world lead in the half-lap and took down the previous meet record of 19.66 that was a world record when Michael Johnson ran it at the 1996 Trials in Atlanta. Lyles, the defending champion, came off the curve with some work to do and powered down the stretch to pass Kenny Bednarek, the Tokyo silver medalist. Bednarek was a strong second in a PB 19.59 to move up to No. 7 on the all-time U.S. performer list, with Erriyon Knighton securing the third Paris berth at 19.77, a season best. Fast-starting Christian Coleman was fourth in 19.89, .01 ahead of Kyree King's PB run in fifth. Repeating her win from 2021, Gabby Thomas stamped her superiority in the women's 200 with a 21.81 to turn back 2019 World Championships silver medalist Brittany Brown, who cut her PB to 21.90. NCAA champion McKenzie Long of Mississippi continued her dream season with a 21.91 for third. Thomas was off the curve fastest and didn't give up any territory over the final 100 as Long had the best final 50 to earn her Olympic spot. A cautious early pace in the women's 10,000 turned into a three-way battle for supremacy between Weini Kelati, the only one in the field with an Olympic qualifying mark, NCAA distance double champion Parker Valby, and Karissa Schweizer, who made the team in the 5000 already. Those three ran together for the final two kilometers before Kelati dug deep to produce a sprint finish that put her across the line in 31:41.07 for victory. Valby leaned best to edge Schweizer for second by .004 seconds, with both women clocking 31:41.56. The deepest men's discus competition ever at the Trials ended up with Andrew Evans atop the standings, taking his second U.S. title with a 66.61/218-6 in round three. Sam Mattis opened with a 66.07/216-9 that held up for second, but Joseph Brown had to sweat it out until his final attempt. That throw sailed out to 65.79/215-10, giving the former NCAA Division II champion for Texas A&M-Commerce his first spot on a global championship team. His effort left Reggie Jagers a heartbreaking four centimeters off the Paris plane. Seven men threw 65m or farther, surpassing the previous deepest Trials finish from 1980 when four men were past that mark. World Indoor champion Tara Davis-Woodhall needed a clutch third-round leap after two fouls to open the women's long jump final, and the Budapest silver medalist did enough to get three more attempts with a 6.64/21-9.5 that put her in fifth. After a 6.69/21-11.5 on her next jump, Davis-Woodhall summoned the power of the Hayward faithful to sail out to 7.00/22-11.75 in round five, albeit with an illegal wind of +2.6 m/s, and she claimed her second straight Olympic berth with a two-centimeter win over triple jump champion Jasmine Moore. Moore's 6.98/22-10.75 in the third stanza was the leader until Davis-Woodhall's winning effort, and she became the first American woman to earn Olympic spots in the long jump and triple jump in the same year. Monae' Nichols snatched the third spot on the podium with a 6.86/22-6.25 on her final attempt to equal the Paris qualifying standard and beat Quanesha Burks, who had been third with her final attempt of 6.80/22-3.75. American record holder and two-time world champion Chase Jackson overcame a sluggish start in the women's shot put to blast a 20.10/65-11.5 season best in round four, the second farthest throw in meet history. That was good for a 20cm win over Tokyo silver medalist Raven Saunders, who immediately took the lead in round one with a 19.88/65-2.75 season best before adding two centimeters to that in the final round. NCAA champion and collegiate record holder Jaida Ross of Oregon was a very popular third-place finisher for the Hayward crowd, hitting 19.60/64-3.75 on her second effort. On a bright and sunny morning on the streets of downtown Springfield, just a few miles from Hayward Field, the top U.S. race walk athletes battled for podium spots. Nick Christie was never challenged in the men's 20km race, winning by more than five minutes in 1:24:46 over Emmanuel Corvera and Jordan Crawford. Christie won his 18th USATF title over an array of distances and defended the Trials crown he won in 2021. The women's walk was more competitive, but the top three quickly separated themselves from the chase pack. Robyn Stevens won her second straight Trials title in 1:37:38, two minutes ahead of runner-up Miranda Melville. Showing that age is no barrier in the event, 58-year-old Michelle Rohl nabbed the third spot on the podium in 1:42:27, 32 years after her first Trials appearance in the 10km event in 1992. That is the longest span of competition at the Trials by any athlete, male or female. Semifinals in the two women's hurdles events featured a world-leading 52.48 from reigning Olympic champion and world record holder Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone in the 400H and a trio of 12.36 clockings in the 100H. McLaughlin-Levrone was almost a half-second better than Anna Cockrell, who won the third section in a PB 52.95 to move to No. 8 on the all-time U.S. performer list. Shamier Little had a season best 53.49 to win semi two. Alaysha Johnson and Tonea Marshall were almost inseparable in the second semi of the 100H, with Johnson getting the nod by .004 as both finished in 12.36. Marshall moved to No. 9 on the all-time U.S. performer list with that time. Masai Russell matched that to win the third and final section, pulling Florida's Grace Stark to a 12.45 PB in second. Full results are available here.