Bolt will consider long jump or 400 after London Games

MIAMI, (Reuters) – Jamaican triple Olympic champion Usain Bolt could compete in the long jump or over 400 metres at the 2013 Moscow world championships, the sprinter told Reuters yesterday.

In a telephone interview from Jamaica, Bolt said he was aiming to emulate American Carl Lewis by successfully defending his Olympic 100 metres title at the 2012 London Games.

He said if he completed the 100-200 double again he would then look to try new events, some years earlier than he has  previously indicated.

“My aim is to defend both of my titles, I have to focus on those first and then after London, I will decide if I will try either of those events,” said Bolt, who is resting at home after cutting his season short to recover from a back injury.

“I really think I will be a good long jumper, that’s what I think, I don’t know what my coach will think, maybe he’ll say try 400 metres.”

Bolt’s coach Glen Mills and many other Jamaicans, have long  felt that the man who smashed the 100 and 200 metres world  records in Beijing two years ago, would make an outstanding 400  meters runner.

“A lot of people think I will be a really good 400 metres runner and if he says let’s try maybe I will try and see what happens. I will listen to my coach because he has been my inspiration throughout all these years,” Bolt said.

Bolt, who yesterday announced a new sponsorship deal with Puma, was more enthusiastic, however, when talking about the   long jump.

As a school kid growing up in the parish of Trelawney on  Jamaica’s North West coast, Bolt first got a taste of the long  jump, one of the many sporting activities, including cricket and  football that he took part in.

But it was a casual jump during a warmup at an event in the  Czech Republic two years ago that gave Bolt the taste for the  event.

“I did long jump in (school) sports day but it wasn’t  anything serious, I went Ostrava one year and I tried it out and  jumped quite a distance, in my tracksuit. I decided. I’d like to  try this before retiring, at the end of my career,” he said.

Last year Mike Powell, holder of the world long jump record  which he set in 1991, said Bolt could break that record of 8.95  metres.

In the more immediate future though, Bolt is focused on  getting back in shape — he returns to training in Kingston on  Oct. 4 — for next year’s world championships.

Prior to taking his break, Bolt was beaten by American rival  Tyson Gay in a Diamond League event in Stockholm and he is keen  to avenge that loss next season.

“I never like to lose but I knew that I wasn’t in the best  of shape this season. I didn’t train as hard so it wasn’t  something that impacted me that badly.

“But I know that it’s a loss. It makes the sport more  exciting now because I know that the next time and Tyson line up  it is going to be really big clash and I am looking forward to  it.

“Definitely it will (be a different story) — he knows that  and I know that”.