Jonathan Ansfield
|
Aug 5, 2008 11:50 PM
Hundred-meter
world record holder Usain Bolt entered a news conference today only 80 percent
sure he’d take a stab at a “double” in the 100 and 200-meter dashes. He emerged
100 percent sure.
Bolt’s
prospects of a “double” in the two events, last accomplished by Carl Lewis in Los Angeles in 1984, has
become one of the hot storylines of the Beijing Games. The 21-year-old Jamaican
was already the favorite for gold in the 200 meters, his forte. He darted into
the thick of 100-meter contention with sprints of 9.76 and 9.72 in May, the latter time nipping
compatriot Asafa Powell’s previous mark of 9.74.
The
Bolt camp had said all along that his coach Glenn Mills would decide whether or
not he’d go for the “double”, which has the downside of added training and
racing and potentially harming his chances in the 200. On Sunday, the AP
confirmed through Bolt’s agent that he would compete in both events.
But
apparently no one told Bolt that. At the start of a Q&A with media in
Beijing on Tuesday organized by Jamaican team sponsors Puma, Bolt said he was
80 percent sure he’d run in both races. “Actually my coach hasn’t really told
me exactly, but I’m just guessing eighty.” Then a reporter informed Bolt of
Sunday’s reports, to which he responded: “This is first time I’m hearing that,
actually.” Bolt recovered swiftly and good-naturedly. He said he’d never had
any such miscommunication before with Mills, whom he praised as a “father
figure”. By the end of the news conference was switching gears with a grin. “I
thought I was 80 percent sure I was going to double, but now I’m 100 percent
sure I’m going to double.”
Nor
did Beijing’s
infamous smog and oppressive August humidity appear to factor in the decision.
Bolt said he’s been training in a camp far outside the capital (in Tianjin, he thought) so
hadn’t had a chance to assess the ill-reputed air himself. But he showed no concerns
about the conditions compounding the physical challenge of the “double”. He had
prepared for it by running the 100 and 200 meters at meets over the course of
this season, and had learned to run easy in trial heats, he noted. “So we’ve
conditioned myself pretty much for this, so I’m kind of used to the heat, so I
don’t think it’s going to take too much out of me.”
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