Imperious Bolt completes amazing 100m treble
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[August 15, 2016]
By Mitch Phillips
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - For 9.81
glorious seconds on Sunday, all the ills that have dogged athletics
recently were forgotten as Usain Bolt stormed to victory in the 100
meters final to become the first man to win three successive Olympic
titles on the track.
The Jamaican superstar trailed arch-rival Justin Gatlin, roundly
booed by the Rio crowd for his doping past, until the 70 meter mark
but then swept past the American, finding time to pat his chest as
he crossed the line a meter clear.
Gatlin, the 2004 champion who came into the race with the season's
fastest time of 9.80, took second in 9.89. Canada's Andre de Grasse
claimed bronze in 9.91 seconds - the same finishing order as in last
year's world championships.
Victory took Bolt a step closer to his goal of winning a historic
"triple-triple" combination of gold in the 100m, 200m and the 4x100m
relay in three consecutive Olympics.
Other than the 2011 world championships, when he was disqualified
for a false start, Bolt has won every other global championship
individual sprint race since 2008.
That equates to five Olympic golds and seven in the world
championships. Throw in two more Olympic and four world championship
4x100m relay golds and the world record in all three events and that
is total and utter domination
"This is what we train for. I told you guys I was going to do it,"
Bolt, 29, told reporters. "Stay tuned, two more to go.
"Somebody said I can become immortal. Two more medals to go and I
can sign off. Immortal."
Already assured of his legend status, Bolt also added to his
reputation as sport's number-one crowd pleaser as he took a
leisurely circuit of the stadium, posing for pictures and shaking a
thousand hands.
OFFICIAL RELIEF
If the fans were pleased, it is hard to imagine the relief felt by
officials of the IAAF and IOC, who must have been dreading a Gatlin
victory.
The American has served two drugs bans, though he denies any
deliberate wrongdoing for either, and at 34 was bidding to become
the oldest 100m champion.
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Usain Bolt celebrates winning the gold medal. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
The Rio fans certainly showed what they thought of him as he was
loudly booed as he entered the arena, and Gatlin returned the
compliment by being the only finalist not to acknowledge the crowd.
Bolt, in contrast, brought the spectators to a fever pitch of
excitement as he strolled in, smiling and waving, to chants of
"Bolt, Bolt, Bolt."
"I was surprised," Bolt said. "It is the first time I have come into
a stadium and they booed someone. It was shocking."
It was no surprise to see Gatlin, the fastest man in the
semi-finals, get his usual explosive start but Bolt, who had looked
much smoother out of the blocks in his semi than in Saturday's
heats, was where he needed to be.
The race followed the pattern of so many before as he eventually
unraveled his long legs to gain maximum pace and though he did not
hit the front until later than he might have liked, when he did he
shot past Gatlin like a track cyclist coming out of a slipstream in
the velodrome.
The time was a long way off his 2009 world record of 9.58 but that
was never the issue at stake.
Heats for the 200 start on Tuesday with the final on Thursday.
(Editing by Ed Osmond)
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