“Lightning” Bolt sprints to the rescue again

BERLIN, (Reuters) – When Usain Bolt blazed to glory  at the Beijing Olympics, he was feted as the hero his tainted  sport had been crying out for. Now, having repeated them in  Berlin, he can consider himself the saviour of the world  championships.

When the event was changed from four-yearly to biennial it  lost much of its lustre, and to many fans became just another,  slightly more glamorous extension of the grand prix circuit.

While memories of Seoul, Barcelona, Sydney and Athens jump  from the mind, it’s far tougher to recall the exploits seen at  Seville, Edmonton, Paris and Osaka.
Berlin 2009 will be different, however, and not just  because of the iconic blue track and the superb 1936 Olympic  Stadium that provided such a stunning backdrop.

Nobody will ever forget the place where a man first ran  “9.5-something” for the 100 metres. Bolt’s 9.58 still seems a  barely believable time coming just a few years after 9.8 was  beyond the reach of all but the absolute cream of sprinting.
The 11 hundredths of a second he took off his own world  mark was twice as big a slice as any previous reduction since  electronic timing was introduced around 40 years ago.

And then he did it again in the 200, clocking 19.19, also  taking 11 hundredths off.
“I’m on my way to becoming a legend,” said the Jamaican,  who duly added a third gold, as he had in Beijing, in the  sprint relay, while having to settle for the second-fastest  time ever.
Smiling Sensation

What makes Bolt’s performances doubly enjoyable is that he  achieved them with a smile on his face and without any of the  posturing and trash talk that characterised sprinting in the  1980s and 90s.

On his 23rd birthday, the Jamaican spent 40 minutes walking  round the stadium patiently signing autographs and joking with  fans and not one person begrudged him his long-awaited Saturday  night party.

Bolt, as in Beijing, was the cutting edge of another  terrific Jamaican sprinting display. Shelly-Ann Fraser added  the women’s 100m title to her Olympic gold while they also took  both relays.

Only American Allyson Felix stood in their way as she won  the 200m for the third time in a row.
Less high profile but in his own way equally impressive is  Ethiopian Kenenisa Bekele, who like Bolt now owns the world and  Olympic titles and world records in both of his events, the  5,000 and 10,000 metres.

The 27-year-old has now won the 10,000 title four times in  a row, matching the feat of compatriot Haile Gebrselassie, and  is the first to achieve the double at the world championships.

Polite and unassuming, Bekele is nevertheless a fierce  competitor, as shown on Sunday when he held off defending  champion Bernard Lagat of the U.S. in a home-straight duel.

American  Authority
The United States, as usual, topped the medal table with 10  golds and 22 in all, with Jamaica second on 7/13.
Among the most impressive American performers were Trey  Hardee, with a gun-to-tape victory in the decathlon that  included a marathon 12 hours in the field on the second day,  and LaShawn Merritt, who followed up his Olympic 400m gold with  another win over defending champion Jeremy Wariner.

The two teamed up to secure a predictable 4×400 relay gold,  the U.S. women doing the same, but there will be some hard  talking after both squads failed to make the final of the 4×100  due to changeover foul-ups – just as they did in Beijing.

And spare a thought for Tyson Gay. Running with a groin  injury he clocked 9.71 in the 100 metres. The third-fastest  time ever – good enough to have won every other world  championship and all but the last Olympic final yet here merely  the bridesmaid’s act to Bolt.

There was a world record in the women’s hammer, though  Anita Wlodarczyk’s 77.96 metre throw was barely noticed in the  cauldron of Saturday night’s action. The Pole will not mind  that though as she banks the 100,000 dollar cheque the record  earned.

Caster Semenya was one of the few winners in Berlin who  struggled to find a smile on the podium and who can blame her.
Hours before the 18-year-old was due to run in the 800  metres final the IAAF, responding to a leaked newspaper story,  announced that the South African was undergoing gender  verification tests following her startling improvement in  times.

She deserves enormous credit for putting that, and all the  speculation that accompanied it, behind her to run a perfect  race and win the gold medal.