The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO OUTRUN USAIN BOLT

Though he didn’t win, Atlantan savors his role in Bolt’s stunning loss.

- By Mike Griffith SEC Country

Tennessee track star Christian Coleman said he “could feel” Usain Bolt coming from behind him as the sprinters approached the finish line in London.

But Coleman didn’t see Justin Gatlin until it was too late, which is how Gatlin took the gold medal in the 100-meter final at the IAAF World Athletics Championsh­ips on Saturday.

“It was all pretty crazy and pretty intense, but I knew it was going to be a great atmosphere like that with people screaming and yelling,” Coleman said in a phone interview.

“Just with what was at stake: the World Championsh­ips and Usain Bolt’s final race.”

Gatlin, who like Coleman is a former sprint champion at Tennessee, stole the show with a historic burst over the final 10 meters to run a 9.92-second time and edge silver-medal winner Coleman (9.94) and third-place Bolt (9.95).

It was the first profession­al event for the 21-year-old Coleman, who devoted his youth to track and football while growing up in Atlanta (Our Lady of Mercy High School) en route to Tennessee.

But Coleman brought a fierce, competitiv­e mindset to the global event. Paired with Bolt in the same semifinal heat, he took first (9.97) to Bolt’s second (9.98).

“I didn’t have an ‘Oh, my gosh, I beat Usain Bolt’ moment in the semis,” Coleman said, asked about snapping Bolt’s 45-race win streak in the 100 meters. “It was all technical thinking at that point. I knew I had to execute. It was all about getting to the final.

“Even though Bolt is someone

I look up to and is an icon, I feel like I deserve to be on this stage, too, and I was coming here to compete. Beating him just meant I had a good lane for the next race.”

In the final, Coleman’s supersonic start put him ahead of the pack off the start line.

“I tried to hold my form. I could feel Bolt coming,” said Coleman, who ran in the lane next to the threetime Olympic 100-meter gold medal winner. “I couldn’t see Gatlin because he was on the outside and then I saw him in the corner of my eye at the end.

“I didn’t know who won — me, Gatlin or Bolt.”

Finally, the scoreboard flashed the results, sending Gatlin into celebratio­n and leaving Coleman with a steely gaze.

“As a competitor, you want to win and for a split second it was a little bit disappoint­ing, knowing how close it was, wondering if you lean a little harder, execute better and then look at film later and say, ‘If I had done this or that,’” Coleman said.

“But then you realize you made it this far, ran second to a great guy, a great competitor and someone I call my friend. So after that second-place finish, I was happy for Justin, happy for the result and happy to be a part of history.”

It was indeed a special event for the 35-year-old Gatlin to finally top Bolt on the world stage.

It was Gatlin’s first 100meter world gold medal since 2005 in Helsinki, bringing him the most attention he has had since winning Olympic gold in the 100 meters in the Athens in 2004.

“Justin has been a great supporter for me,” Coleman said. “He’s a great competitor and we get locked in to beat each other at events, but at the end of the day, we’re teammates and great friends.”

Coleman, who ran the fastest 100-meters in the world this year (9.82) at the NCAA championsh­ips, will be teaming up with Gatlin on Friday in the 400-meter relay.

“I’ll just try to get a little rest and recover a bit,” said Coleman, the only man in the world to beat Bolt in the 100 meters twice in the same day. “There’s another race ahead.”

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tennessee star Christian Coleman, formerly of Our Lady of Mercy High School, flies the flag Saturday after finishing second in the 100 meters at the world championsh­ips.
MATTHIAS SCHRADER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Tennessee star Christian Coleman, formerly of Our Lady of Mercy High School, flies the flag Saturday after finishing second in the 100 meters at the world championsh­ips.
 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Christian Coleman crosses the line with Jamaican star Usain Bolt, who settled for bronze in his final race.
DAVID J. PHILLIP / ASSOCIATED PRESS Christian Coleman crosses the line with Jamaican star Usain Bolt, who settled for bronze in his final race.
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