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hmmmn... interesting... has usain shot his bolt?

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  • hmmmn... interesting... has usain shot his bolt?

    Has Usain shot his Bolt?

    For the first time in years the planet's fastest man is looking vulnerable. Simon Turnbull reports on whether the unthinkable might happen when he defends his sprint titles at the World Championships in South Korea

    Asafa Powell is sitting in a Birmingham hotel, a black beanie hat pulled tightly over his shaven head. "This is like the North Pole for me," he says.


    The heat will soon be on for Powell, the fastest man in 2011, and for his Jamaican compatriot Usain Bolt, the fastest man of all time, in the battle for the World Championship 100m title. The first-round heats take place at the Daegu Stadium in South Korea next Saturday. The final will be at 12.45pm British time a week today.

    The question in the wake of the last World Championships in Berlin two years ago was how much quicker the Lightning Bolt might be able to strike. Having knocked lumps out of his own world records for the 100m and 200m, reducing them from 9.69sec to 9.58 and from 19.30 to 19.19 respectively, the world was wondering what the magical Bolt might do for his next trick.

    A 9.4sec 100m, perhaps? A sub-19sec 200m? There was even talk of the just-turned 23-year-old expanding his horizons to embrace new challenges. The 400 metres, maybe? Or even the long jump?

    Two years on, the questions have been lowered from the fantastical to the pragmatic. Such as: will Bolt even win the 100m in Daegu? And, from the long-term point of view: has the Jamaican phenomenon possibly even shot his bolt on the world record front?

    A Bolt win is not the foregone conclusion that it once was. After he clowned his way to victory in the Olympic 100m final in Beijing in 2008, clocking a world record 9.69sec despite applying the brakes and celebrating some 20 metres out, one newspaper published a cartoon of the beanpole sprinter lazing in an armchair beyond the finish line, puffing on a cigar and enquiring of his still-toiling rivals: "Where have you been?"

    Entire article:
    http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/g...t-2341305.html
    'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

  • #2
    Wins the 200M & the 4 x 100m?
    Yes!

    The 100M?
    Maybe not! It would extra-ordinary if he wins the 100M.
    ...but he is, Bolt!!

    As I told Willi waaaaaay back it will be a hell of a task for him to get back to 100M winning ways for this meet.

    The coming Olympics?
    That, I think, is doable. There is the time to work his way back.

    I just think he does not have the time to run into 100M form. The runs will be his 'training runs'.
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

    Comment


    • #3
      I don't expect him to be at his best but I still consider him the favourite.

      You don't think 9.79 can win the 100M finals? His competitors will have to prove they can deliver their PR or close to it on the big day, he does not.
      "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

      Comment


      • #4
        Bolt turned 25 today, they could at least do some more work there...
        Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
        Che Guevara.

        Comment


        • #5
          Bolt does not have to be 100% to win but every body else including Asafa must be on their A game to beat him.

          Once he gets that start and if he is close at 40m they will not catch him as that 200m strength will make the difference
          Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
          Che Guevara.

          Comment


          • #6
            BOLT:

            100m Gold
            200M Gold
            4x100 Gold

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Baddaz View Post
              Has Usain shot his Bolt?

              For the first time in years the planet's fastest man is looking vulnerable. Simon Turnbull reports on whether the unthinkable might happen when he defends his sprint titles at the World Championships in South Korea

              Asafa Powell is sitting in a Birmingham hotel, a black beanie hat pulled tightly over his shaven head. "This is like the North Pole for me," he says.


              The heat will soon be on for Powell, the fastest man in 2011, and for his Jamaican compatriot Usain Bolt, the fastest man of all time, in the battle for the World Championship 100m title. The first-round heats take place at the Daegu Stadium in South Korea next Saturday. The final will be at 12.45pm British time a week today.

              The question in the wake of the last World Championships in Berlin two years ago was how much quicker the Lightning Bolt might be able to strike. Having knocked lumps out of his own world records for the 100m and 200m, reducing them from 9.69sec to 9.58 and from 19.30 to 19.19 respectively, the world was wondering what the magical Bolt might do for his next trick.

              A 9.4sec 100m, perhaps? A sub-19sec 200m? There was even talk of the just-turned 23-year-old expanding his horizons to embrace new challenges. The 400 metres, maybe? Or even the long jump?

              Two years on, the questions have been lowered from the fantastical to the pragmatic. Such as: will Bolt even win the 100m in Daegu? And, from the long-term point of view: has the Jamaican phenomenon possibly even shot his bolt on the world record front?

              A Bolt win is not the foregone conclusion that it once was. After he clowned his way to victory in the Olympic 100m final in Beijing in 2008, clocking a world record 9.69sec despite applying the brakes and celebrating some 20 metres out, one newspaper published a cartoon of the beanpole sprinter lazing in an armchair beyond the finish line, puffing on a cigar and enquiring of his still-toiling rivals: "Where have you been?"

              Entire article:
              http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/g...t-2341305.html
              Bolt has the 100m Gold locked up even at 9.7X. Powell has the speed but not the big race nerves. I believe that Blake has the big race nerves but not the speed.
              The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Islandman View Post
                I don't expect him to be at his best but I still consider him the favourite.

                You don't think 9.79 can win the 100M finals? His competitors will have to prove they can deliver their PR or close to it on the big day, he does not.
                9.79?

                I am thinking 9.84 can!
                "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                Comment

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