Cape Breton Post

One more shot

De Grasse has sights set on retiring ‘legend’ Bolt

- BY JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Andre De Grasse knows the questions are coming - they always do.

The Canadian sprinter is holding court with reporters under a tent on the ninth-floor terrace of a downtown luxury hotel when the first query about Usain Bolt comes his way. Then another and another. “I’m getting used to it,” said De Grasse, flashing his milliondol­lar smile. “He’s one of the best. For me to have people stop talking about it, I have to go out there and beat him.”

The 22-year-old from Markham, Ont., likely has just one more opportunit­y to dethrone the fastest person on the planet.

Bolt will retire sometime after August’s world track and field championsh­ips in London, where the 30-year-old Jamaican is scheduled to race in the men’s 100 metres and 4x100 relay.

“It’s a big moment,” said De Grasse. “He’s the greatest. You always want to go against the best. He’s a legend.”

In town to race today at the Harry Jerome Internatio­nal

Track Classic in suburban Coquitlam, B.C., De Grasse finished second behind Bolt in the 200 metres at last summer’s Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

The Canadian also picked up two bronze medals at his first Games — in the 100 and 4x100 — races where Bolt earned

gold, but he sees a real opportunit­y this summer.

“Everyone knows he’s slowing down a little bit,” De Grasse said. “He’s getting older, but he’s still the man to beat. “He’s still running fast times.” Bolt and De Grasse were one of the big stories in Rio as the

young upstart pushed track and field’s superstar a little harder than he expected — with the pair exchanging memorable grins at the finish line following their 200-metre semifinal.

“It’s all friendly,” said De Grasse. “He can say stuff, I say stuff. At the end of the day we’re cool with each other.”

The owner of eight Olympic gold medals and the world record in the 100 metres at 9.58 seconds, Bolt hasn’t raced much this season, but did post a 10.03 in Jamaica earlier this month.

De Grasse, meanwhile, ran a wind-aided 9.69 seconds to capture the 100 at an event in Stockholm on June 18, three days after winning at the same distance in Oslo.

The 9.69 would have smashed the Canadian record of 9.84 seconds held by both Donovan Bailey and Bruny Surin, but the wind reading was an illegal 4.8 metres per second -above the two-metre threshold.

De Grasse, whose fastest legal time in the 100 was the 9.91 he ran in Rio, also won the 200 metres in Rome on June 8.

He thinks 9.84 will fall sooner rather than later.

“I could have broken it last year,” said De Grasse. “I’m really healthy. I feel like I can do it before the world championsh­ips.”

Wednesday’s meet is a tuneup ahead of the Canadian track and field championsh­ips that run from July 3 to 9 in Ottawa before the worlds, which begin Aug. 4.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Canadian sprinter Andre De Grasse leaves after a news conference for the Harry Jerome Internatio­nal Track Classic in Vancouver, B.C., on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO Canadian sprinter Andre De Grasse leaves after a news conference for the Harry Jerome Internatio­nal Track Classic in Vancouver, B.C., on Tuesday.

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