Khaleej Times

The athletics world is hoping to cash in on the success of cricket’s high-octane Twenty20 format with a new team event spearheade­d by Usain Bolt which starts on Saturday in Australia.

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melbourne — The athletics world is hoping to cash in on the success of cricket’s high-octane Twenty20 format with a new team event spearheade­d by Usain Bolt which starts on Saturday in Australia.

The inaugural Nitro Athletics in Melbourne, which will also be held on February 9 and 11, features non-traditiona­l events such as middle-distance and hurdles relays.

World 100-metre record holder Bolt said on Friday: “We just want to make it more exciting so I’m looking forward to seeing the crowd reaction to what we are doing.”

Twelve events each evening will include an eliminatio­n mile, where the slowest runners are knocked out after each lap until three competitor­s contest the final circuit.

Male and female runners will also

I think it’s going to be great, it’s going to be like cricket, but Twenty20 Usain Bolt

accumulate team points in a 60-metre (65.6-yard) dash, the 150 metres and a 2x300-metre relay.

Bolt will be supported by US Olympic hurdle champion Kerron Clement and sprinter Asafa Powell to try to draw in the crowds.

“I think it’s going to be great, it’s going to be like cricket, but Twenty20,” Bolt said on Thursday.

The format sees an ‘All-Stars’ team captained by the Jamaican sprinter compete against teams from Australia, China, Japan, England and New Zealand.

“Hats off to you guys for being brave enough to step out of the box that athletics has found itself in for donkey’s years,” England’s captain and 2008 Olympic champion Christine Ohuruogu said.

Australia’s Twenty20 Big Bash League smashed spectator and television viewership records this season pulling in families and younger spectators. Crowds averaged 30,114 a game, Cricket Australia said.

Athletics Australia chief Phil Jones said there was a need to lift spectator and sponsorshi­p interest in athletics outside the Olympics and World Championsh­ips.

“We have a number of backers,” he told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n. The concept is supported by Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s president Sebastian Coe.

Earlier Bolt said he has no plans to extend his career beyond this year’s world championsh­ips in London and has ruled out a return to Australia for the 2018 Commonweal­th Games.

Bolt, who completed a ‘treble treble’ of 100m, 200m and 4x100m Olympic titles at the 2016 Rio Games, had his 2008 relay gold stripped last month after team mate Nesta Carter’s re-tested sample showed traces of a banned substance. —

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 ?? AFP ?? Usain Bolt gestures during a press conference ahead of the Nitro Athletics meet in Melbourne. —
AFP Usain Bolt gestures during a press conference ahead of the Nitro Athletics meet in Melbourne. —

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