The Borneo Post

Pain no gain as Bolt, Farah’s farewell party falls flat

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LONDON: Athletics legends Usain Bolt and Mo Farah experience­d some of their greatest moments in their careers at the 2012 Olympics in London but five years on and back in the same stadium, misery replaced joy on Saturday.

Bolt, who won the individual 100 and 200m and the 4x100m relay in London in 2012, collapsed to the track injured anchoring the Jamaica 4x100 metres relay team.

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

“But a lot of pain is from disappoint­ment from losing the race,” Jones said.

“The last three weeks have been hard for him, you know. We hope for the best for him.”

The organisers brought on a wheelchair but Bolt shrugged them aside and he limped across the line, grimacing.

The last three weeks have been hard for him, you know. We hope for the best for him.

Ja mai ca’ s 110 m hurdles champion Omar McLeod and relay team- mate said nothing had changed with regard to the reputation of Bolt.

“Usain Bolt’s name will always live on,” he said.

Briton Farah, who had won the first of his four global double doubles of 5,000m and 10,000m to deafening cheers in London in 2012, put up a spirited and courageous effort but for the first time in six years of global championsh­ip competitio­n he had to settle for silver behind Muktar Edris of Ethiopia.

Far ah, who started the championsh­ips in grand style by winning the 10,000m, had been left by Edris as the bell went and as hard as he tried he just didn’t quite have the legs to pass his younger rival in the finishing straight.

“It’s been amazing. It’s been a long journey but it’s been incredible,” said Farah who was embraced by his fans as he made his way around the stadium on a lap of honour, stopping to sign autographs and pose for ‘selfies’.

“It doesn’t quite sink in until you compete here and cross the line — I had a couple of minutes to myself — that this is it.”

The despair and disappoint­ment of Bolt and Farah was in stark contrast to another hero from 2012 — Australia’s 100m hurdling great Sally Pearson.

The 30 - year- old’s grit and determinat­ion to come back from two years of injury hell — she feared that she would have to have her hand amputated when she suffered a bone explosion in her wrist in 2015 — was rewarded with her second world title.

The Australian celebrated in exuberant style, her mouth spread in a broad grin as she charged to the stands.

She tried to find her English mother Anne McLellan — who had taken two jobs when she was raising her daughter as a single parent so she could go to training and achieve her dream — and husband, childhood sweetheart Kieran but without success.

“Far out, that was bloody hard,” gasped Pearson.

“It’s been a long journey back from injury, but to get this moment and go and celebrate in front of my family is unreal.” — AFP

Dr Kevin Jones, Jamaican team doctor

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