Panay News

Organizers to blame for Bolt defeat – teammates

-

LONDON – Usain Bolt’s dramatic and inglorious end to his top level career was the fault of world championsh­ip organizers, his f urious teammates claimed.

The 30-year-old 100m and 200m world record- holder collapsed on t he London Stadium track while anchoring Jamaica in the final of the 4x100m on Saturday as cramp gripped his leg.

Bolt lay prone on the track but waved away the offer of a wheelchair and eventually, aided by his three teammates, limped across the line before making a hasty exit – not the way the man who had won triple Olympic gold at the same stadium in 2012 would have GEORGIAN wished his competitiv­e career in championsh­ips to finish. B u t h i s t e a mmates

GM Baadur Jobava (2714) emerged as the clear winner in the 2017 Xtracon Chess Open that ended July 31 at the Konventum Elsinore Hotel in Helsingor, Denmark.

Jobava tallied 8 ½ points on 7 wins and 3 draws in the 10- round Swiss event. His performanc­e also underscore­d the grandmaste­rs’ dominance of the 433- player field, with eight of them tying for second to ninth places half- a- point behind Jobava.

The eight (in the order of their tiebreak score) are GMs Krishnan Sasikiran ( 2688), Marin Bosiocic (2616), Nikita Vitiugov ( 2724), Sunilduth Narayanan Lyna (2564), Nigel Short (2688), Ivan Saric (2621), Andrey Kvon (2500), and Mads complained that his problem was caused by organizers keeping the relay teams waiting in the cold before their race as several medal ceremonies were held.

“I think they were holding us too long in the call room. The walk was too long. Usain was really cold. In fact Usain said to me, ‘ Yohan, I think this is crazy. 40 minutes and t wo medal presentati­ons before our run’,” said Yohan Blake, who branded the wait as “crazy.”

“We kept warming up and waiting, then warming up and waiting,” added the 2011 100m world champion, who also won Olympic relay gold in 2012 and 2016 with Bolt.

“I think it got the better of us. We were over warm. To see a true legend, a true champion Anderssen ( 2586). Fourteen players that included GMs Alexander Motylev (2680), Jon Ludvig Hammer ( 2628) and Simen Agdestein (2604) scored 7½ points apiece and tied for 10th to 23rd slots. Meanwhile, GM Ivan Sokolov (2626) and Dutch chess legend GM Jan Timman (2578) led a 25-player score group with 7 points apiece and sharing 24th to 48th places. Jobava,B (2714)-Short,ND

(2688) [A14] Helsingor (8.1) 2017 go out there and struggling like that. The race was 10 minutes l ate and we were kept 40 minutes.”

Bolt may not have l ed Jamaica to a glorious finale anyway, though, as he took the baton well behind eventual winners Great Britain and the US.

But Jamaica’s 110m hurdles world champion Omar McLeod – who ran the f i rst l eg – likewise pointed the finger at organizers for denying his country’s greatest star a more fitting swansong.

“It’s heart wrenching,” said McLeod, who is also the Olympic champion.

“It was ridiculous man, we were there around 45 minutes waiting outside, I think they had three medal ceremonies before we went out so we were really trying our hardest to stay warm and keep upbeat.

“But it was ridiculous. We waited a really long time. I drank like two bottles of water.”

Their criticism echoed that of Justin Gatlin, who led an American 1- 2 alongside teammate Christian Coleman to deny Bolt a farewell gold in the individual 100m.

“I think it was the elements. I am sorry he got this injury. He is still the best in the world,” said Gatlin.

“It was a recipe. I don’t want to say this, I understand we need to be ready early, but I think we took our clothes off a little too early.

“It’s a little chilly in here so I think that’s where the cramp came from. That’s what he suffered with. He was running out there cold.” (

 ?? AFP ?? Usain Bolt falls after injuring himself in the final of the men’s 4x100m relay at the 2017 IAAF World Championsh­ips at the
London Stadium.
AFP Usain Bolt falls after injuring himself in the final of the men’s 4x100m relay at the 2017 IAAF World Championsh­ips at the London Stadium.
 ?? AFP ?? Alexander Zverev (pictured) reacts after scoring against Roger Federer during the Rogers Cup in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
AFP Alexander Zverev (pictured) reacts after scoring against Roger Federer during the Rogers Cup in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines