Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Bolt seals ‘triple-triple’

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USAIN Bolt brought the curtain down on his Olympic career with a record-equalling ninth gold medal on Friday, anchoring Jamaica to relay glory in a perfectly-scripted finale to complete his unpreceden­ted “triple-triple.”

The 29-year-old superstar, widely seen as the greatest sprinter in history, stormed over the line in 37,27sec to trigger an eruption of adulation in the Olympic Stadium.

Japan’s quartet took a surprise silver in 37,60sec while Canada took bronze after the United States, who crossed in third, were later disqualifi­ed.

The victory saw Bolt complete a third consecutiv­e clean sweep of the 100m, 200m and 4x100m titles following his six gold medals in the 2008 and 2012 Games.

It leaves Bolt — who will retire in 2017 — level with Carl Lewis and Paavo Nurmi on a total of nine Olymdals, Olympic gold medals, a record for a track and field athlete.

The relay y gold was the final act of an incredible Olympic careeraree­r that redefined athletics and often left commentato­rsors scrambling to find a new vocabulary of superlativ­ess as each new milestone came and went.

On Sunday ay Bolt became the first man in history to win a hat-trick of 100m gold medals.

He then followed that up with Thursday’sday’s barnstormt­he barnstormi­ng win in the 200m, sealing another never-before-seenver-before-seen tretriumph treble.

Friday’s triumph was potentiall­yally the mostst awkward, , with Bolt’ss gold medalal hopes reliant on the performanc­es of his teammates.

But Asafa Powell, Yohan Blake and Nickel Ashmeade were in no mood to fluff their lines.

A superb third leg by Ashmeade ensured that Bolt had a precious lead after the final changeover.

From that point there was only ever going to be one outcome and Bolt powered home by three metres to universal delight.

Bolt will now set off a year-long lap of honour that will culminate with the World Championsh­ips in London next August.

The Jamaican is preparing to exit with athletics fighting to restore credibilit­y after a year dominated by doping and corruption scandals.

Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s president Sebastian Coe is adamant however that athletics will endure despite the loss of its most charismati­c matic leading man.

In an interview with AFP on Friday, Coe said BoltB had transcende­d his sport in a way that was comparable­compa ble to boxing icon Muhammad Ali.

“The man is a genius,” Coe said. “There’s b been nobody since Muhammad Ali who’s got remotely n near to what this guy has done in terms of grabbing the p public lic imaginatio­n.”

However, Coe arguedarg u thath t just as a n new generation of boxers emer emerged after Ali’s retirement, so track and field wo would unearth new personalit­ies after Bolt. “It’s a massive gap, but it’s not a gap tha that is insuperabl­e,” Coe said. “You’re not going to fill that gap overnight,ov night, but there are great, talented athl athletes out there.” — AFP

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