Gay unfazed by Bolt threat to world titles

ROME, (Reuters) – Tyson Gay said he was unfazed by  the threat Olympic champion Usain Bolt posed to his 100 and 200  metres titles at next month’s world athletics championships.

Gay said he was “100 percent” confident of defending his  crowns in Berlin after recovering from the hamstring injury that  hampered his preparations for last year’s Olympics, in which  Jamaican Bolt set world records to win both events.

“I look at him like another competitor,” American Gay told a  news conference yesterday on the eve of the Golden Gala in  Rome, where he goes head to head with Bolt’s compatriot Asafa  Powell, the former 100m world record holder.

Gay replied “Yes” when asked if he thought he could keep his  100m crown even if Bolt repeated the record time of 9.69 he  produced to win the Beijing Olympics.

The American has started the season well, running a  wind-assisted 9.75 seconds in the 100m at the U.S. world  championships trials and 19.58 in the 200m, the third fastest  time ever.

But he conceded that Bolt looked impressive this week in  running 19.59 for the 200 in Lausanne in torrential rain.

“Considering the conditions — it was raining, wind in his  face, cold — he looked pretty good,” Gay said.

Powell did not betray any nerves about taking on Bolt.

“It’s the same here. Usain is just another competitor,” said  Powell, who was part of Jamaica’s Olympic winning relay team  with Bolt.

“He ran 9.69, which showed we can go under 9.70. Once it was  me when I ran 9.74. He set a mark for us.

“We know it’ll take faster than 9.69. We know what it takes  to win.”

Powell said he was not back to his best despite winning the  100m in last week’s Golden League meeting in Oslo because of the  ankle injury he suffered in training over two months ago.

“It’s about 85 percent better,” he said.

America’s Damu Cherry will not be able to keep alive her  hopes of landing the $1 million Golden League jackpot after  winning the first two women’s 100m hurdles.

She did not enter the Rome race initially and all the lanes  have now been taken.

Three women and two men still have a chance of taking the  prize shared between the athletes who win their events at all  six Golden League meetings.

The men are Ethiopian middle distance great Kenenisa Bekele,  racing in the 5000m, and Finnish javelin world champion Tero  Pitkamaki.

The women are Sanya Richards of the United States in the  400m, Jamaica’s Kerron Stewart, who will take on her compatriot  and Olympic champion Shelly-Ann Fraser in the 100m, and Russia’s  Yelena Isinbayeva in the pole vault.