Bolt's record of 19.19 seconds for the 200 has stood since Aug. 20,
2009, four days after he set the 100m record of 9.58 seconds, both
at the world athletics championships in Berlin.
"I really want to run under 19 seconds," Bolt told Reuters from his
training base at the University of West Indies in Kingston as he
began preparations for next year's Rio Olympics. "It's one of my
major goals.
"I think it's one of the toughest ones, because it's going to be
hard to find the right day and sometime the perfect race to get this
(200m record).
"It will not be an easy task, but I personally feel I can do it and
my coach (Glen Mills) thinks I can do it so it is just about the
work and finding the perfect time to do it, so it is one of the
things (for 2016)."
Bolt is seeking to become the first man to win three successive
Olympic titles in the sprint events and the 4x100m relay in Rio.
The lanky Jamaican shrugged off a nagging pelvic injury this year to
win three golds at the Beijing world championships in August, which
included ending American Justin Gatlin's almost two-year unbeaten
run over both the 100 and 200 meters.
Gatlin has already said he feels he is closing the gap on his
Jamaican competitor, having only lost the 100m final in Beijing by
0.01 seconds. Bolt won the 200 more comfortably.
"It's one of the joys to go out there and to compete against the
best because when you go out there and beat the best it shows that
you are the greatest," Bolt said in anticipation of facing Gatlin
again next year.
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"So for me, I live to compete and I look forward to my team mate
Yohan Blake coming back ... he's been out for pretty much two
seasons."
The Jamaican, whose initial day of training was thwarted by rain,
sounded a warning to Gatlin, Blake and anyone else considering
trying to stop him at next year's Olympics.
"Justin Gatlin says he's coming, but for me, I'm much more focused,"
Bolt said.
"I'm starting the season in a much better shape than I did the last
one, so it is only forward from here."
(Editing by Greg Stutchbury/Mark Lamport-Stokes)
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