In his final meet of a brief 2020 outdoor campaign, Noah Lyles swept the sprint titles at the Istvan Gyulai Memorial meet in Székesfehérvár, Hungary, to lead Team USATF efforts at the second World Athletics Continental Tour gold stop. Team USATF athletes made up half of the contestants in the men’s 100m, but all eyes were on World 200m champion Noah Lyles (Clermont, Florida), who met expectations after a workmanlike start, pulling away in the final half of the race to win in 10.05. Elijah Hall (Houston, Texas), the winner at Lignano, Italy, on Monday, finished in 10.31 for third, while Demek Kemp (Norman, Oklahoma) clocked 11.02 in sixth. Mike Rodgers (Georgetown, Texas) was eliminated after a false start. After winning the 100m earlier, Lyles decided he wanted to run the 200m, and he sealed the sprint sweep with a solid 20.13. He was even with Italy’s Eseosa Desalu off the turn and that duo ran shoulder-to-shoulder through 180m, where the reigning World champion Lyles started to ease away. Hall took fourth in 20.69, with Rodgers (21.53) and Kemp (22.20) in seventh and eighth. Fresh off a world-leading 50.50 in the 400m at the Monaco Diamond League meet, Lynna Irby (Clermont, Florida) kept up with two-time World champion Dafne Schippers around the bend in the women’s 200m and then powered away to win easily in 22.55, .39 ahead of history’s third-fastest woman. A pair of Americans dominated the one-lap races. Wadeline Jonathas (Columbia, South Carolina), fourth at the World Championships last fall, made a strong move from 200m-300m to take the lead and held on to win the women’s 400m in 52.09. Doha 800m silver medalist Raevyn Rogers (Eugene, Oregon) had a rare outing over one lap and clocked 52.50 for fourth, her third-fastest time ever. 2018 USATF Outdoors champion Kahmari Montgomery (Houston, Texas) set off very quickly over the first 200m of the men’s race and extended his lead through the last half to win in a season-best 45.50 over Josephus Lyles (Clermont, Florida), who was second in 46.08. Trumaine Jefferson (Houston, Texas) ran 48.23 in eighth. A disappointing early pace robbed Donavan Brazier (Portland, Oregon) of any chance at Johnny Gray’s world record of 1:12.81, and Brazier had to work hard down the final stretch to overtake Puerto Rico’s Wesley Vazquez. Overtake him he did, though, winning in 1:15.07. David Kendziera (Chapel Hill, North Carolina) was eighth in 1:21.11. The other U.S. winner was Kendziera in the men’s 400m hurdles, where he took gold with a U.S.-leading 50.00 in his first race of 2020 over the barriers. Two Doha stars added silver medal performances in the blustery conditions. Reigning world champion Grant Holloway (Gainesville, Florida) blasted out of the blocks and was well clear after just two hurdles, but his early speed cramped his technique over the barriers later and he lost a bit of momentum and the race to Orlando Ortega, taking second in 13.22, .01 behind Ortega. A well-executed season best of 13.30 gave Freddie Crittenden (Phoenix, Arizona) third, and Aaron Mallett (St. Louis, Missouri) also notched a 2020 best with a 13.45 in fifth. Christian Taylor (Jacksonville, Florida), the reigning triple jump World champion and already the U.S. leader after winning at the Austrian Championships over the weekend, opened with a 17.02m/55-10.25 and then after a couple of fouls he improved to 17.34m/56-10.75 to move into second behind Hugues Fabrice Zango’s world-leading 17.43m/57-2.25. He matched that in the final round and ended up second, tacking 21 cm onto his 2020 best. In her first hurdles race of the outdoor season, 2019 USATF Indoors 60m hurdles champion Sharika Nelvis (Memphis, Tennessee) showed signs of rust as she took sixth in a U.S.-leading 13.09. Taliyah Brooks (Fayetteville, Arkansas) fell early in the race. Official results can be found here.