I
could have won more if I'd got serious: Bolt
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[December 03, 2016]
By Mitch Phillips
MONACO
(Reuters) - Looking back at his astonishing career on the night he
was named Athlete of the Year for the sixth time, Usain Bolt said
his only real regret was not taking his sport more seriously at an
earlier age.
"Maybe I would have been at four Olympics," the superstar Jamaican
sprinter told reporters on Friday before being crowned IAAF male
Athlete of the Year again on the back of his amazing Rio de Janeiro
Games sprint triple-triple in August.
"The award is definitely a big deal, it proves all the hard work has
paid off," he said after Olympic 10,000 meters champion and world
record holder Almaz Ayana of Ethiopia took the women's equivalent.
"The fans helped vote for this and it's for the fans I keep doing
it."
With nine Olympic golds in the drawer, Bolt plans to hang up his
spikes next year after a farewell tour of his favorite venues.
He will run the 100 meters only before competing at the world
championships in London where he will be gunning for his 12th and
13th world titles if he goes in the relay.
"When I look back the only real thing I think I would change was to
have got more serious more quickly," said Bolt.
"I was relying more on my talent. If I’d got more serious I think I
would have done a lot more in my career. It's shocking but it’s
true. Maybe if I’d started younger I’d have had four Olympics."
Despite his multiple titles and world records, Bolt said the race
that would always have a particular place in his heart was the world
junior championships in his home country when he won the 200 as a
15-year-old.
"That was special," he said. "That was the beginning. Jamaica 2002,
where it all began. That was the biggest step."
However, it was a defeat five years later that made the biggest
impact.
Bolt took the 200 silver behind American Tyson Gay at the 2007 Osaka
world championships and it was a real wake-up call.
"After I lost I remember going to my coach saying, 'I really tried
my best but what can I do to win because I really need to win?’,"
Bolt explained.
"He said: 'You're slacking off in the gym. If you want to win you
have to get stronger.’ So I was like ‘alright’. I knew what I needed
to do and from then I took the step and just worked and worked."
SPECTACULAR STYLE
Within nine months Bolt was the 100 world record holder and weeks
later blasted himself into worldwide consciousness by winning the
100 and 200 and 4x100 relay at the Beijing Olympics in spectacular
style.
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Usain Bolt of Jamaica poses before a press conference for the 2016
IAAF Athletics Awards in Monaco, December 2, 2016. REUTERS/Eric
Gaillard
Having found a way to win he was
in no mood to stop, repeating the feat at London 2012 and, despite
early season injuries, doing it again in Rio.
Now 30 and with his speediest days behind him, Bolt is trimming his
workrate to enjoy one last season, running a series of 100 races
only.
"Next year is mainly for the fans," said Bolt who always gives up a
huge amount of time to sign autographs and pose for photos every
time he races.
"It's a last opportunity for some people to see me run and a chance
for me to say goodbye. I'd like to go back to some of my favorite
places to run, Ostrava, Lausanne, maybe Paris."
And then that will be it. The man who has carried his troubled
sport, sometimes single-handed, for a decade will step aside for the
next generation.
There will be no Michael Phelps-style comeback at the 2020 Tokyo
Olympics either.
"Oh no," he said. "My coach said, 'Do not retire and come back,
don't ever do that'.
"It’s a bit different for swimming but for most track and field
athletes it never goes well.
"I'm still talking to people about what I will do afterwards and I
definitely want to stay involved in the sport but at the moment I am
just looking forward to doing nothing," said Bolt.
(Editing by Ed Osmond and Tony Jimenez) [© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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