The Korea Times

Coleman roars to world 100m gold win

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DOHA (AFP) — Christian Coleman hit back at U.S. sprinting legend Michael Johnson on Saturday after powering to a brilliant 100m victory at the World Championsh­ips.

Coleman blew away his rivals to take the first major outdoor title of his career, clocking a world-leading personal best of 9.76 sec at the Khalifa Stadium.

The win cemented Coleman’s status as the man to beat at next year’s Tokyo Olympics, and elevated the 23-yearold American to the head of a pack of sprinters aiming to be the new face of athletics in the post-Usain Bolt era.

In the eyes of Johnson, however, Coleman has already forfeited the right to be the figurehead of track and field after the missed drugs test controvers­y that marred his build-up to the games.

Coleman, however, was unmoved by Johnson’s remarks as he celebrated Saturday’s win.

“Michael Johnson doesn’t pay my bills or sign my cheques,” Coleman said.

“So I don’t really care what he has to say.”

Coleman was only able to compete in Doha after the case against him was withdrawn because of a technical loophole.

Johnson however maintains that the odour of wrongdoing will continue to linger around Coleman, even if he ultimately avoided sanction.

“It completely disqualifi­es him, at this point, from ever being that face of the sport,” Johnson said in a BBC interview this week.

“This will follow him, as it should…Christian Coleman was being touted to replace Usain Bolt as the big star of the sport.

“I don’t think that will happen now. I think that fans of athletics don’t have any tolerance at this point for any sort of doping infraction.”

Coleman gave Johnson’s remarks short shrift though, believing that ultimately he will be judged by his performanc­es on the track.

“I think the face of the sport goes to the people who are putting up the performanc­es,” he told a press conference.

“The faces of the sport are going to be the people who are putting up the right times and representi­ng the sport in the right way.”

Coleman rejected suggestion­s that he would need to do more to work as an ambassador for athletics as penance for the drug test controvers­y.

“You’re insinuatin­g that something happened — and at the end of the day I did nothing wrong,” he said, repeating his claim that his case was leaked into the public domain before it had been properly adjudicate­d.

“I’m just a young black man living my dream, and it’s kind of disappoint­ing that someone would leak that informatio­n to try and smear my reputation.

“I just keep doing me and representi­ng the sport the right way. Like I said, I didn’t do anything wrong.”

Coleman, who has repeatedly denied taking performanc­e-enhancing drugs, also denied requesting an apology from USADA in a video statement posted on Youtube earlier this month.

“Some people aren’t interested in the truth, they’re just putting out stories hating on a young black kid just living the dream,” he said. “And I have no idea why they would want to do that.

“I’ve done everything right, I’m a model citizen.”

Saturday’s 100m final meanwhile was emblematic of track and field’s struggle to capture new audiences in recent years.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Christian Coleman, of the United States, center, reacts after winning the men’s 100 meter race beside fourth placed Akani Simbine of South Africa, left, and second placed Justin Gatlin of the USA, right, during the World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha, Qatar, Saturday.
AP-Yonhap Christian Coleman, of the United States, center, reacts after winning the men’s 100 meter race beside fourth placed Akani Simbine of South Africa, left, and second placed Justin Gatlin of the USA, right, during the World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha, Qatar, Saturday.
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