Bolt
reigns supreme but too many empty seats
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[August 22, 2016]
By Mitch Phillips
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Usain Bolt
delivered. Mo Farah, Elaine Thompson, David Rudisha, three world
records and a dominant United States played their part too, as
athletics enjoyed being back in the limelight for the right reasons
after a torrid year.
The absent Russia team were not missed but the absent fans were and
organizers will need to find out why the crowds were so small for
what should have been the centre-point of the Games.
Empty seats for morning sessions are not unusual, though not to the
scale witnessed in Rio, and if they cannot sell out a
60,000-capacity stadium to watch Bolt in the Olympic 100 meters
final then there is a problem somewhere along the line.
Bolt did his best to lift his sport, as he always does, completing
his incredible triple-triple of 100metres, 200m and 4x100m relay to
join Paavo Nurmi and Carl Lewis on nine gold medals as the most
successful athletes in history.
The Jamaican also made sure that every media outlet and every fan
got to see and hear him, aware as he is of his extraordinary
standing as the shining beacon of hope and excellence amid the murk
of doping and corruption.
There was much talk in Rio about who is going to fill the void once
he retires next year and South Africa's Wayde van Niekerk made an
early case with a stunning 400m victory to demolish Michael
Johnson's 1999 world record.
Even that performance though was eclipsed by the extraordinary
women's 10,000m final, where the first 13 finishers set personal
bests.
While Van Niekerk's mark was widely acclaimed, Ethiopian Almaz Ayana
was immediately questioned after destroying Wang Junxia's 1993
record by 14 seconds.
There was also spectacular hypocrisy in the widespread booing of
American double-doper Justin Gatlin while many other offenders,
including some American team mates, were accorded a polite welcome.
Back on the good news side of the ledger, Farah impressively matched
Lasse Viren's achievement of retaining both the 10,000 and 5,000m
titles, Thompson pulled off a brilliant 100/200m double while
Rudisha overcame a troubled year to retain his 800m title.
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Usain Bolt (JAM) of Jamaica celebrates winning the Jamaican team's
gold medal. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
Ashton Eaton underlined his status as the greatest all-round athlete
in the world by successfully defending his decathlon title, helping
the Unite States to a table-topping 13 golds, while Pole Anita
Wlodarczyk broke her own world record to take the women's hammer.
For home supporters there will be one memory above all as Thiago da
Silva pulled off a shock pole vault victory to win Brazil's first
athletics gold for 34 years.
The shame for Da Silva was that, unlike Sydney's cacophonous Cathy
Freeman night or London's Super Saturday, his moment in the sun was
witnessed by no more than around 10,000 fans.
IAAF President Sebastian Coe acclaimed the 10 days' "enthralling"
action as evidence that "our sport is alive and incredibly strong".
However, with positive drugs tests littering the last two Olympics
and still emerging even eight years on from Beijing, the time to
judge whether athletics in Rio has been a success or another
festival of doping is probably still a long way down the road.
(Editing by Alison Williams)
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