The Scottish Mail on Sunday

BOLT’S LAST STAND

How can athletics replace the great showman as he bids for one final shot at glory in London?

- By Jonathan McEvoy

THE final husbanding of Usain Bolt’s extraordin­ary talent is taking place in Munich, on the track and in the clinic. Two of the father figures who have helped the brilliant Jamaican to unparallel­ed athletic success for the past decade are there with him on the eve of his farewell appearance in London this week at the World Championsh­ips.

His coach Glen Mills, a wise, Pentecosta­l on whose deep-voiced pronouncem­ents Bolt hangs, is retuning the technical minutiae of the 100metres.

And, Hans Muller-Wohlfahrt, the famous German doctor, is patching up one of the most brittle and abused back-and-hamstrings mechanisms in sporting history.

Should their expertise pay off, Bolt will get to the finish-line first on Saturday, collect his 12th World gold medal, before signing off in the 4x100m relay final a fortnight today. Then he will be gone.

Just short of his 31st birthday, athletics’ biggest phenomenon will return to Kingston, Jamaica, to spend languid days in retirement.

‘At this point, I have no idea what I will do when I stop,’ said Bolt. ‘But I always wanted to be able to have a lot more time to do charity work.

‘I have my football dream. I would like a trial to see if football makes any sense for me. But I always want to stay as close as possible to track and field. My coach says I should be an assistant coach at Racers Track Club in Kingston, and I will be part of that for sure.’

As Bolt spoke in Monaco after his final race before London, he was in reflective mood. He took on the air of an elder statesman. The usual joking of his press conference­s had gone — recognitio­n that a chapter is now about to close.

He added: ‘There is no better feeling than walking out and the fans seeing you for the first time, and me waving. It gives me goosebumps every time. I will miss that.

‘For a few years, I think I’ll be fine. I’ll still be recognised by the crowds. I am still the one who has broken all the records, still the one who has won all the medals.

‘It will never change and that was my aim all my career. To be one of the best so no one will ever forget.’

The sport will miss him, not least as a star propelled by chicken nuggets when too many of his rivals were drug-powered.

He has stood for good against evil, most famously in the shape of America’s disgraced serial doper Justin Gatlin. Tyson Gay and Bolt’s Jamaican team-mate Asafa Powell also feature prominentl­y on that crime sheet.

But more than anything we will remember Bolt for the chestthump­ing glory of Beijing, the 9.69sec streak that imposed itself on the retinae of every viewer.

Yet, nine years on, the slightest nagging melancholy impinges on that joyous mid-race celebratio­n: for that was the moment the world record was truly at Bolt’s mercy to refashion at will.

Yes, he ran 9.58sec at the World Championsh­ips in Berlin a year later, but the fight for fitness — brought on by scoliosis, a curvature of the spine that caused his right leg to be half-an-inch shorter than his left — meant he could not hit the 9.4sec mark of his dreams in the early years of this decade.

But, helped by Muller-Wohlfahrt, he repeatedly emerged at the end of seasons of fitness struggles in winning form for the big races. It has been some feat for a man who, by his own admission, never liked to work too hard.

This year is following a familiar trajectory: his time in Monaco was a technicall­y proficient 9.95sec after 10.03sec and 10.06sec in his previous two outings.

This improvemen­t has come against the backdrop of personal anguish, with the death in April of his friend Germaine Mason, Britain’s silver medal-winning high jumper at the Beijing Olympics. He was killed while riding his motorbike in Jamaica.

Norman Peart, who has helped to look after Bolt’s affairs since he was a junior, said: ‘Usain and Germaine got to know each other well in 2002. Germaine was his right-hand man. His death was a major blow but Usain never let it affect his training.’

Lord Coe, president of athletics’ governing body, the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) has to prepare for the void Bolt will leave.

But first he hands out bouquets to the man he considers the greatest.

He said: ‘I remember in the 1970s speaking to a journalist and discussing what the sport would do when Muhammad Ali retired.

‘The reality is that you can’t replace Ali. It’s not that great boxers don’t come along. They do. Chavez, Hagler, Hearns, Leonard, Duran. The point relating directly to Bolt is not that it’s unlikely we will get someone else who will win so many medals and a sackful of world records; it’s the personalit­y you won’t replace.

‘I was in Jamaica earlier this year and their Prime Minister spoke to me about what he could do to build on everything Bolt means to sport — and beyond.’

A new generation will line up, but for Bolt there is only fine-tuning left to do. For us, one final glimpse of the clowning prince switching suddenly into a reverie of concentrat­ion on the blocks.

Then he will go back with nearly £30million in career earnings to the island where, as a country boy, he once played cricket in the streets with stumps cut from a banana tree.

 ??  ?? FINAL LAP: A year on from glory at the Rio Olympics, Usain Bolt is saying goodbye to his athletics career
FINAL LAP: A year on from glory at the Rio Olympics, Usain Bolt is saying goodbye to his athletics career
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