Bolt
targets third sprint sweep to close Olympic chapter
Send a link to a friend
[July 21, 2016]
By Nick Mulvenney
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Usain Bolt is
keenly aware of the narrative of his extraordinary career and, for
the fastest man who ever lived, the only fitting way to close its
Olympic chapter is with a third sprint sweep at next month's Rio
Games.
Bolt is already assured of a place not only in the pantheon of his
own sport but alongside the likes of Muhammad Ali, Pele, Michael
Jordan and Jack Nicklaus - men whose names alone conjure up the
notion of sporting excellence.
It is company the confident Jamaican covets and he is determined to
concrete his legacy by capping eight years of sprint dominance by
defending his 100, 200 and 4x100 meters relay titles in what he has
said will be his final Olympics.
Barring injury or mishap, Bolt will run in his ninth Olympic final
in the relay at the Rio Olympic Stadium on Aug. 20, the day before
he turns 30.
He ran his first final in Beijing five days before his 22nd
birthday, exploding into the consciousness of sports fans around the
world by coasting to 100 meters victory in a world record time of
9.69 seconds with one shoelace undone.
Since that balmy August night Bolt has proved unbeatable in major
championships, winning 11 world titles and sweeping the three sprint
titles at the Beijing and London Olympics.
 The one title he missed came at the 2011 worlds in Daegu when he was
disqualified from the 100 final.
Then, some of the conjecture over his false start focused on
possible jitters caused by a lack of fitness but he blew away those
theories with victories in the 200 and the relay.
Bolt has since lived with, and confounded, the injury narrative
ahead of two major championships - a sore hamstring hampered him
before London and a back problem similarly limited his outings
before the 2015 world championships.
This year, Bolt was forced to skip the Jamaican Olympic trials
because of another hamstring injury but his rivals, chastened
perhaps by experience, have no doubt he will be at his best in Rio.
Former world champion Tyson Gay described the injury scares as a
"tradition", while Justin Gatlin said it was all part of the "crazy
stuff" of an Olympic year.
"On the eve of the Olympics we'll all be debating whether he can
win. And then he will win," American 400 meters great Michael
Johnson said.
[to top of second column] |

Jamaica's Usain Bolt reacts after the men's 100m race. REUTERS/David
W Cerny

GATLIN THREAT
Gatlin, as he was before Bolt's triple world championship triumph in
Beijing last year, is shaping as the biggest threat to the
Jamaican's monopoly on the Olympic sprint titles.
The 34-year-old American's two doping convictions have lent the air
of a morality play to the battle for sprint supremacy between the
pair.
Bolt's pristine doping record and profile have see him cast as the
savior of his sport as it battles the turmoil unleashed by a string
of doping and corruption scandals.
However brilliant, Bolt knows he cannot "save" his sport, and is
content instead to ensure his own legacy before he heads into
retirement after next year's world championships in London.
His form indicates Bolt might not be in position to challenge the
world records of 9.58 and 19.19 seconds he ran to win the 100 and
200 at the Berlin world championships in 2009.
But, as Gatlin said at the U.S. trials when discussing the
Jamaican's injury problems, Bolt has made a habit of making the
extraordinary ordinary:
"The mystery of the Olympics is in the air. It is full of dreams and
sometimes dreams don't come true. But come on, man, he's Usain."
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |