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Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, Noah Lyles shine at NYC Grand Prix

NEW YORK -- Hurdle queen Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone's experiment in the 400 meters flat appeared to be paying off Saturday, when she cruised to victory at the NYC Grand Prix in 49.51 seconds, while Noah Lyles showed no loss of form to thrash the 200-meter field.

American McLaughlin-Levrone wrested the lead at the halfway point from compatriot and 200-meter Olympic bronze medalist Gabby Thomas, who finished second in 50.29. Jamaican Charokee Young took third in 51.02.

"The flat is definitely harder in my opinion," McLaughlin-Levrone said. "It's hard to kind of figure out your cadence midrace. At least with hurdles I kind of know where I'm at. It's a different kind of pain but the challenging good one."

The 23-year-old took a huge chunk out of her own 400-meter hurdles world record last year to win the world championship in 50.68 and become the first woman to break the 51-second barrier in the event.

On the same night, she eyed new territory and told reporters she was considering a foray into the 400-meter flat.

McLaughlin-Levrone finished second in her 400-meter season debut at the Paris Diamond League earlier this month and said she had deployed a new technique to achieve her personal best at the Continental Tour Gold event in New York.

"Compared to the Diamond League race in Paris, I went out a little more conservatively to kind of feel the back end a little bit better. I did a good job of that," she told reporters. "Some things to clean up, but a PR is a PR."

Later in the day at Icahn Stadium, Lyles exploded off the blocks and never ceded the lead to cross the finish in 19.83 and tie retired great Usain Bolt's record for the most sub-20-second finishes in the 200.

Issam Asinga of Suriname took second in 20.25 and American Elijah Morrow finished third in 20.30.

"The main reason I came out here was to make sure that I get up to top speed today," said Lyles, who retained his 200-meter world crown in a U.S. sweep last year. "Especially in that first 100. I was really proud of that moment. A little bit of hitch coming off the turn but nothing to be worried about."

The ebullient Olympic bronze medalist rolled through the Big Apple less than two weeks before the U.S. trials kick off July 6 in Eugene, Oregon.

The world championships begin in Budapest on Aug. 19.

American Olympic and world champion Athing Mu cruised to another win in the 800-meter event a stone's throw from her hometown of Trenton, New Jersey, while Briton Zharnel Hughes broke a three-decade-old British record to win the 100 in 9.83 seconds.