Email

Luzhniki track a puzzler for world champion Bolt

Usain Bolt of Jamaica celebrates winning in the men's 100 metres final during the IAAF World Athletics Championships at the Luzhniki stadium in Moscow August 11, 2013. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

(Reuters) – Winning gold medals comes as second nature to Usain Bolt. But the sprint king who usually packs a punch in any stadium, in any city, was left pondering the “different feeling” he got from regaining his world 100 meters title on Sunday.

Usain Bolt of Jamaica celebrates winning in the men’s 100 metres final during the IAAF World Athletics Championships at the Luzhniki stadium in Moscow August 11, 2013. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

Bolt put his 2011 Daegu disappointment when he was disqualified for false starting in the final firmly behind him when he produced his best race of, by his own high standards, a less than stellar season.

The world’s fastest man took gold in 9.77 seconds, ahead of American Justin Gatlin, but admitted the blue Mondo track in Moscow’s Luzhniki stadium was unlike any other surface he had encountered in his period of sprint dominance.

“It felt different, I don’t know if it was bad different,” the Jamaican told a news conference.

“But it didn’t feel like a normal track that I’m used to running on. It was a little bit different. Personally I can’t complain about that really.”

In cooler air to the earlier muggy conditions, the track was made slick by a downpour that left beads of rain dropping off the eight finalists as they crouched in the blocks.

Bolt, aware that Gatlin, in the lane to his left and the man to beat, was unfazed.

“For me the rain is just the rain. We have run in rain before, We have run in colder weather. It didn’t really affect me in any way.”

With one gold secured, and with a repeat of his 2008 and 2012 triple Olympic gold haul firmly in his sights with the 200 meters and 4×100 relay to come, Bolt said he needed time to recover.

“I’m just going to look forward to running the 200 meters,” he said. “I can’t promise anything but I’ll always go and give it my best. Hopefully everything will come together.

“My legs are sore right now, I’ll get some ice baths, get my masseuse to work on them, I should be ok…”

The Jamaican, by his own admission “race rusty” coming into the championships after being dogged by a hamstring injury in the early part of the season, and suffering a rare defeat to Gatlin in Rome in early June, said he felt no pressure in the Russian capital.

“It’s all about if you want to put yourself under pressure. For me I don’t put myself under any pressure because I know what I want. I want the same thing everybody wants,” he said.

“So I go out there and compete. After I win or lose I’m always going to be happy with myself because I went out there and gave it my best.”

As befitting a Bolt post-championship winning news conference, he faced the usual barrage of questions on his love of football, Manchester United and his stated desire to play professionally.

“I think they’ve asked all the running questions, they’ve run out of things to ask me so they just ask football questions,” he said.

But striking a sincere tone, Bolt continued: “I’m always going to choose running, the talent I’ve got, it was a god given talent and that’s what I use.

“I try to inspire people. I try to motivate everybody, let them know that anything is possible.”

(Editing by Rex Gowar)

Related posts

Biden and Trump agree to 2 presidential debates, in June and in September

Columbia University protests look increasingly like those in 1968 as police storm campuses nationwide

Nearly 2,200 people have been arrested during pro-Palestinian protests on US college campuses