Global Times

Sad farewell for Bolt

Injury floors star and ruins final competitio­n

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Usain Bolt’s glittering career swan song came crashing to an end when he pulled up with a leg cramp on the anchor leg of the world 4x100- meter relay won by Britain on Saturday.

Bolt received the baton with Jamaica in third, but halfway down the finishing straight the towering sprinter pulled up clutching his left thigh, eventually doing a forward somersault to the ground, to gasps from the 60,000 sellout London Stadium.

The British quartet of Chijindu Ujah, Adam Gemili, Daniel Talbot and Nethaneel Mitchell- Blake claimed gold in 37.47 seconds, with the Justin Gatlin- led US four taking silver at 0.05 seconds and Japan a surprise bronze ( 38.04).

Jamaican team doctor Kevin Jones said Bolt had suffered from “cramp in his left hamstring.”

Second- leg runner Julian Forte said, “He didn’t tell us exactly what happened but from what I saw, it looked like a strain or a cramp of some sort ... He kept apologizin­g to us but we told him there was no need to apologize – injuries are part of the sport.”

Newly crowned 110- meter hurdles champion Omar McLeod, Jamaica’s leadoff runner, added, “Everybody was jelly, everybody was pumped. [ Bolt’s injury] just happened. Usain Bolt’s name will always live on.”

Bolt missed out on his bid to retain his 100- meter title earlier in the week, losing out to Gatlin and silver medalist Christian Coleman, who ran relay anchor for the Americans on Saturday.

But hopes were high for Bolt’s final competitiv­e race, with Jamaica also boasting McLeod, Forte and 2011 world champion Yohan Blake in their lineup.

Jamaica were afforded a rousing welcome from the crowd, a relaxed- looking Bolt applauding the stands, with pictures of him constantly shown on the stadium’s big screens.

Gatlin, who has served two doping bans, and the US team also including another convicted doping cheat, Mike Rodgers, and Jaylen Bacon were booed when introduced although the jeering was less pronounced than for the individual 100- meter event.

A close first three legs saw Britain, the US and Jamaica, seeking a fifth consecutiv­e world title, level- pegged for the final leg.

But there was to be high drama as a visibly swearing Bolt pulled up in obvious pain, allowing the Japanese quartet to edge in for third.

The result means Bolt, 100- and 200- meter world record holder, finishes his career with 14 world career medals, one behind American Allyson Felix, to go with eight Olympic golds.

Amid wild home celebratio­ns, Bolt was attended to by medics, but refused a ride in a wheelchair off the track, instead finally getting up and limping alongside his teammates through to the finish line and then off into the bowels of the stadium for treatment.

It was a sad exit for an athlete who has lit up the track when the sport has been dragged through its worst- ever crisis, racked by doping and corruption scandals that went to the very heart of athletics’ governing body.

Since confirming his sprinting dominance with triple gold at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Bolt spent nine seasons amassing 19 global golds, 13 of which have come in individual events.

Allied with a charismati­c personalit­y, it has guaranteed Bolt recognitio­n as one of the world’s most successful sportsmen. Last year alone he earned $ 34.2 million, according to Forbes.

 ?? Photo: CFP ?? Usain Bolt of Jamaica falls during the men’s 4x100- meter relay final at the IAAF World Championsh­ips in London on Saturday.
Photo: CFP Usain Bolt of Jamaica falls during the men’s 4x100- meter relay final at the IAAF World Championsh­ips in London on Saturday.

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