Toronto Star

BOLT FLAMES OUT

Jamaican legend suffers injury in last race of his career, taking a spill in 4x100-metre relay final at world championsh­ips,

- RAF CASERT

LONDON— Usain Bolt ended his stellar career in excruciati­ng pain.

The Jamaican great crumpled to the track with a left-leg injury as he was chasing a final gold medal for the Jamaican 4x100-metre relay team on Saturday at the world championsh­ips.

Having to make up lots of ground on the anchor leg, Bolt suddenly screamed, stumbled and somersault­ed as he came down, his golden farewell shattered by the first injury he has experience­d at a major competitio­n.

That wasn’t the only surprise. Britain went on to beat the United States in a tight finish.

The 60,000-capacity stadium was primed for one last Bolt show, one last “To the World” pose after a victory, but the injury made it blatantly clear why Bolt is ready to retire. His body can no longer hold up.

“He is still the best in the world,” said Justin Gatlin, Bolt’s American rival who ended up with 100-m gold and relay silver.

Bolt’s teammates on the once-fabled Jamaican sprint squad were far from unmatchabl­e, too. Bolt just had too much time to make up in the final 100m as both Britain and the United States were ahead and even Japan was even.

As Bolt fell to the ground, the leg with the golden shoe giving way, the crowd still went wild because the home team went on to win gold in 37.47 seconds, .05 seconds ahead of the United States.

“It’s a cramp in his left hamstring, but a lot of the pain is from disappoint­ment from losing the race,” Jamaican team doctor Kevin Jones said. “The last three weeks have been hard for him, you know. We hope for the best for him.”

The race will certainly be remembered for the gut-wrenching way in which the sport’s greatest athlete was forced to end his career.

“It just happened,” Jamaican lead runner Omar McLeod said. “Usain Bolt’s name will always live on.”

It was yet another amazing upset in a championsh­ip of so many.

Before Bolt came onto the track, he was consoling Mo Farah, his longdistan­ce equivalent who had just lost his first major race since 2011 when he failed to get gold in the 5,000m.

Farah also was bidding farewell to the track, coming up short of his fifth straight 5,000-10,000 double at major championsh­ips in a sprint against Muktar Edris Ethiopia.

“I gave it all,” Farah said. “I didn’t have a single bit left at the end.”

Instead, Tori Bowie was the unlikely first double gold medallist at the championsh­ips, anchoring the U.S. women’s team to the 4x100-m relay title ahead of Britain and Jamaica.

At the same time, Allyson Felix, running the second leg on the winning team, earned a record15th medal at the world championsh­ips in a career going back to 2005. Bowie, who won the 100m this week, ran a strong anchor leg, leaving behind the opposition to finish in 41.82 seconds.

“Two gold medals is amazing for me,” Bowie said. “We are on top of the world.”

Britain took silver in 42.12 and twotime defending champion Jamaica earned bronze in 42.19.

If Bolt and Farah were about farewells, the decathlon was about renewal in the wake of the retirement of two-time Olympic and world champion Ashton Eaton. And Kevin Mayer is the new “world’s greatest athlete.”

Mayer won with 8,768 points. Rico Freimuth took silver with 8,564 points, while German teammate Kai Kazmirek was third with 8,488.

Johannes Vetter, of Germany, won the javelin title with an opening throw of 89.89m.

The German beat Jakub Vadlejch, of the Czech Republic, by 16 centimetre­s. Another Czech, Petr Frydrych, took bronze with a last throw of 88.32m.

In the high jump, Mariya Lasitskene, of Russia, cleared 2.03m to win ahead of Yulia Levchenko, of Ukraine, and Kamila Licwinko, of Poland.

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 ??  ?? Usain Bolt’s fall in Saturday’s 4x100 relay was the first injury he had ever suffered at a major meet.
Usain Bolt’s fall in Saturday’s 4x100 relay was the first injury he had ever suffered at a major meet.

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