Exuberant US sprint star Noah Lyles won the Olympic 100m title by five-thousandths of a second and gives every appearance of becoming the new Usain Bolt in the eyes of the media. He is a professional track and field sprinter who competes in the 60, 100 and 200 metres; a two-time Olympic medalist and six-time world champion.
He was born 18 July 1997 in Gainesville, Florida with athlete parents and has a Sun Cancer opposition Neptune in Capricorn square Saturn in Aries which in turn is opposition Mars. A wonderful mix of Neptunian vision coupled with a disciplined Mars Saturn and self-reliant Saturn in Aries. His Sun is in an out of element trine to Pluto in Sagittarius. His Jupiter in mid decan Aquarius is in an upbeat, enthusiastic trine to Mars.
His chart is not too similar to Usain Bolt’s, 21 August 1986, who is a late Sun Leo in an out of element square to Saturn in Sagittarius and trine Neptune; with an adventurous Jupiter square Uranus and a publicity-attracting Mars Neptune.
But both share strong global superstar 22nd harmonics. And an ultra-determined 16H.
ADD ON: UK’s Keely Hodgkinson won gold in the women’s 800m with what one commentator described as a mix of “brilliance and bloody-mindedness.” To date she has only won silver but remarked three months back: “I would like to be one of the [most] decorated British athletes by the time I’m done.”
Born 3 March 2002, she has a Sun and Venus in Pisces both square Pluto which in turn opposes Saturn. She has the tough-minded Saturn Pluto boosting her Pisces Sun – and continues the Neptunian theme amongst top athletes (like gymnast Simone Biles and swimmer Kathy Ledecky). She has an intense Scorpio Moon which may be square Neptune and for an early morning birth opposition Mars in Taurus; and her Moon is also probably trine Jupiter in Cancer.
At the moment her Solar Arc Sun is square her Jupiter.
She also has a marked total-determination 16H and global star 22H.
A formidable lady.
Lyles caught COVID after his gold, which likely contributed to his failure to win the 200m, having to be medically attended to (tho a bronze isn’t bad for the rest of us). As a high performing athlete with another event to go, one would think he should have been careful not to contract the illness particularly with large numbers of participants, visitors and press, plus he’d had issues with asthma, so I wonder whether his chart can indicate overconfidence and/or carelessness after he’d finally reached the top (Sun-Neptune?). I hope he’ll fully recover
Well done to Letsile Tebogo of Botswana who beat Lyles in the 200m. He was running for his mum who recently passed away.