Evelyn wins Enhanced Games 100m

The first-ever edition of the controversial Enhanced Games wrapped its opening track and field session Sunday night in Las Vegas, with two-time Barbadian Olympian Tristan Evelyn securing top honors in the women’s 100-meter sprint and walking away with a $250,000 cash prize. The 28-year-old veteran sprinter crossed the finish line with a time of 11.25 seconds, outpacing the rest of the competitive field to claim the historic win at the unconventional sporting event. What makes Evelyn’s victory particularly notable is that multiple credible industry reports confirm she competed as an unenhanced athlete, meaning she did not leverage the performance-enhancing substances or technologies that the event explicitly allows participants to use. Since it was first announced, the Enhanced Games has drawn global scrutiny and widespread media attention for its unprecedented approach to performance enhancement in competitive sport, breaking with longstanding international anti-doping regulations that govern most major professional and Olympic athletic events. The inaugural gathering has sparked fresh debate across the global sports community about the future of competitive integrity, drug testing, and what counts as a fair advantage in elite athletics.