ZURICH (Reuters) - World champion Karsten Warholm ran the second-fastest time in history when he held off a late challenge from American champion Rai Benjamin to clinch the men’s 400 meters hurdles at the Diamond League finals on Thursday.

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Running in lane seven, Norwegian Warholm was fractionally ahead off the final bend and fended off Benjamin’s challenge to win in 46.92 seconds, six hundredths of a second ahead of his rival.

Benjamin appeared to be gaining near the finish line before Warholm found an extra gear and pulled away again to win in a time 0.14 seconds outside American Kevin Young’s world record of 46.78 set in 1992.

American Sydney McLaughlin gave another glimpse of her potential when she won the women’s equivalent race, beating Olympic champion and world record holder Dalilah Muhammad in the process.

McLaughlin, 20, was level with Shamier Little at the halfway point, with fellow American Muhammad also in the frame, but burst away on the second bend to win in 52.85 seconds, over one second clear of the field.

Little was second and Muhammad, who set a new world record of 52.20 at the U.S. championships last month, third.

“I am absolutely shocked and amazed,” said McLaughlin. “This was a strong race. But it was not my cleanest one at a couple of hurdles. I need to work on that.”

American Noah Lyles took the men’s 100 meters crown when he powered past world champion Justin Gatlin to win in 9.98 seconds and claim his third Diamond League title, with the previous two in the 200 meters.

Gatlin was beaten into fourth place behind China’s Xie Zhenye and Jamaican Yohan Blake.

Bahaman Shaunae Miller-Uibo, Olympic champion over 400 meters, ran the best time of the year to win the women’s 200 meters in 21.74, beating Olympic champion Elaine Thompson and twice world champions Dafne Schippers.

There was a dramatic final in the men’s 800 meters where Nijel Amos led for most of the race only for the Botswanan to see the trophy snatched from him by American Donavan Brazier who stormed in from nowhere.

World champion and Olympic bronze medallist Sam Kendricks snatched the men’s pole vault title by clearing 5.93 meters with his last attempt, pipping Sweden’s Armand Duplantis who had already failed at that height but had the better scorecard.

Kendricks ran around the athletics track, arms aloft, milking the applause and apparently oblivious that the women’s 1500 meters was underway, before going back to the field.

“I am exhilarated and exhausted,” Kendricks said. “There are great competitors. Nothing was decided until the last moment, everybody was waiting to make this moment. It was a special moment.”