Cape Argus

Blake sees Commonweal­th Games as step to build on Bolt’s legacy

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NEXT MONTH’S Commonweal­th Games will be Yohan Blake’s chance to build on Usain Bolt’s “legacy” and step out of the track great’s shadow, the former 100 metres world champion said yesterday.

Bolt retired last year with eight Olympic and 11 world championsh­ip gold medals to his name, leaving his former training partner Blake to carry the flame for Jamaica.

“Usain Bolt has left his legacy for us to carry on and that’s what we want to do,” Blake told local media after landing in Australia for the April 4-15 Games on the Gold Coast.

“That’s what I want, to start with the Commonweal­ths, to take over the dominance of the sprinting world.”

The 28-year-old Blake won his only individual global title in the 100m at the 2011 world championsh­ips when Bolt was disqualifi­ed in the final, but has three other gold medals as a member of the Jamaican 4x100m relay team.

He has yet to win any kind of medal at the Commonweal­th Games but Bolt, who ran the relay at his only Commonweal­ths appearance in Glasgow four years ago, joked there would be trouble if Blake did not succeed when the athletics programme begins April 8.

“Usain Bolt was at the track in Jamaica before I left,” said Blake. “He said, ‘if you don’t win there is going to be problems’.

“I don’t have a Commonweal­th medal. It’s very important for me to have one in my trophy case.”

Blake, who finished fourth in the 100m at the Rio Olympics, was in top form last year heading into the world championsh­ips in London and qualified third fastest for the final.

However, he was shut out of the medals by Bolt, who took bronze behind winner Justin Gatlin and Christian Coleman. Blake also failed to make the 200m final in a surprise.

The absence of Canada’s Andre De Grasse makes Blake a leading contender in both the sprints, though he will have stiff competitio­n in the 100m from Adam Gemili, the Glasgow silver medallist, and another Englishman in Zharnel Hughes in the 200m.

“It will be a better year this one and I want the Commonweal­th Games to set the year up for me,” Blake said. – Reuters

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