 Brown silver medalist last year is in fine form as well. So to a Johnny Daly, he's in personal best shape of Antigua and Barbuda with Amelia Bishop of Grenada going in lane number eight. What a final this is on paper, Terry Finister. Brilliant way to close out the evening. The silver medalist from last year, the gold medalist from last year, the fastest man in the field showing up to race, showing up to take on his competitors. Two from Jamaica, one from Jamaica, two from the Cayman Islands, two from Bahamas in this final should be a very, very interesting one. We see Grenada represented as well. So this is going to be a very, very interesting, very keenly contested final, I think. And Sydney, Dunkley will be pressed to take the gold this evening with the two young men from the Cayman Islands running at or near the top of the game. I thought Jaden Reid looked fantastic in qualifying. Truth is, so did Javor and Dunkley. They all three, in different, they all three ran races that demonstrated how far they were ahead of the rest of the field. So I think those three really, Carlos Brown will try to get into the mix up. But those three, at least in qualifying, showed that they were class above the rest of the field just in the way that they treated the competitors. They showed, hey, you know, that you guys are running, but I'm running. I'm running, running. So those three guys have already put their stamp on the competition so far. Javon, Dunkley, Jamaica, Jaden Reid, Cayman Islands, and Devonte Howell of the Cayman Islands, the defending champion. They've looked very, very sharp. Last year, I had the feeling going into the final that it was going to be Devonte Howell. I felt he looked the best in qualifying this year. I think even more difficult to call, although I think Reid or Dunkley. Samuel Green of Grenada goes in lane number one. He needed to run 10.60 to get into this final. Beside him in lane two, Jeremiah Adderley, 10.53 in qualifying, very close to his lifetime best. He knows if he has to get a medal, he has to run a PB. Devonte Howell, 10.35, a season's best in qualifying. The defending champion at his best is 10.29, not the University of Tennessee. This young man, 10.17 at his best, is coached by the same man who coaches Shelley and Fraser Price and Elaine Thompson-Hera. Here is Jayden Reid, the former Jamaica College athlete out of Kingston, Jamaica. Now at the LSU, Louisiana State University, looked amazing in quantifying the Caymanian junior record holder. Carlos Brown missed the final in 2022, returned last year at home in the Bahamas to secure Silva. Can he find a way to get back among the medals this time around? Ajane Dele of Antigua and Barbuda, eighth and fourth in the last two finals. His teammate, Geolina Doudy, has gotten her first medal. Can he somehow get his as well? And on the outside in lane number eight, the second Grenadian in the final, Emilia Bishop, coming in with a 10.59 clocking. The Grenadians inside extreme, outside extreme. Round eight with the principals in the middle. What a final we have here. Your guess is as good as mine. Final of the Under 20 boys, 100 meters. One way or another, should be a cracker. Can Devonte Howell of the Cayman Islands defend this title? Will his teammate, Jayden Reid, finally step into his glory? How about Donkli, a Silva medalist in the 200 last year? Off they go. Donkli got up well, so too did Howell. Jayden Reid is running brilliantly. Howell steps ahead of the field. Devonte Howell is away from the rest and blows the field away. The defending champion repeats and it wasn't even close. That looked stupendous. Howell justifiably asked the crowd, are you not entertained? And I think we are. That was a brilliant run there by that young man, a young man who is in absolute command of his circumstances. Got very close to the championship record. He has definitely gotten the Caymanian Junior record once the wind is legal, as we are with confirmation, it's 10-1-5. He beats Jayden Reid, who I think got bronze, and beats Jayden Reid's Caymanian Junior record as well. What a terrific performance. Jayden Reid, understandably, may be a little disappointed, but he celebrates with his teammate, Reid gets Silva. 10-34, they now know it's a Caymanian 1-2. Wow, season's best performance for Reid. No, actually went faster in qualifying. Javorn Donkley, no doubt disappointed, but he's been beaten by two terrific performances. 10-34 for the bronze, Silva at 200 last year. Bronze at 100 this time around. But Devonte Howell absolutely blew the field away and maybe, just maybe, if he had been pushed, Johan Blake's 10-1-1 might have been gone tonight. I think when he hit probably about a 90-meter mark, he realized that this thing was over, started gesturing to the crowd. There he is, way out in front. You see him pulling away from his teammate. There's daylight between himself and Reid in second, Donkley in third. Run through that line there. And who knows? How dare you doubt me? How dare you think it could be anyone else? Devonte Howell defends the 100 on the 20 title sensational performance. Positive 0.5 meters per second. Devonte Howell, Caymanian on the 20 record, 10.15. Jaden Reid, 10.34 to complete the Caymanian 1-2 and JaVon Donkley of Jamaica 10-34. A bit of trivia. Can you believe that Cayman won't have a 4-by-120 boys team? Ajane Dele, the Antigua finishes fourth again. Gerard Marcily.