USA TODAY US Edition

His 200 hopes over, Gatlin seeks respect

- Josh Peter @joshlpeter­11 USA TODAY Sports

It was hard to tell Justin Gatlin had just failed to advance to the 200-meter finals. Hard to tell his individual Olympic track career had just come to an end. Hard to tell he felt resentment about being cast as the foil for Usain Bolt in the sprints in the Rio Games.

Gatlin, 34, looked at peace after finishing third in his 200 semifinal heat, one spot shy of automatica­lly qualifying for the final and a last head-to-head race with Bolt.

“It’s a showman’s sport,” Gatlin said Wednesday night. “I think the rivalry that I have with Usain and myself has turned it into a profession­al wrestling feel. You know, everyone’s cheering for Usain, but they have to have someone they’ve got to boo against.”

The boos weren’t all about Bolt, of course.

Gatlin served a one-year ban for testing positive in 2001 for a banned substance. Five years later, after winning the gold medal in the 100 in the 2004 Athens Games, he tested positive again, getting a four-year ban.

But again Gatlin regained his eligibilit­y and his form, winning a bronze in the 100 in the 2012 London Games and winning the silver in the 100 here.

“At the end of the day, I think that a lot of people saw how hard I worked,” he said. “And I’ve gained a lot of respect from a lot of the fans, when they come out and see me, even people not from the United States, when they come out there and cheer me and give me heart gestures and cheer for USA. That’s all I ask for, because that’s what sport is built on, respect.”

Gatlin expects to race Bolt one last time but as part of the 4x100 relay. But Wednesday night he seemed less concerned with winning than changing the perception that he was someone who deserved to be booed.

“I respect my competitor­s, you know; I get respect back from them,” he said. “I respect people out there who pay for their tickets to come watch us compete. And I respect the reporters, because they’ve got to come out here and tell a good story. That’s what it is. It’s just a cycle of respect.”

 ?? JAMES LANG, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “At the end of the day, I think that a lot of people saw how hard I worked,” Justin Gatlin says.
JAMES LANG, USA TODAY SPORTS “At the end of the day, I think that a lot of people saw how hard I worked,” Justin Gatlin says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States