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  • Bolt-"Time to get serious"

    Bolt - “Time to get serious”

    Friday 29 June 2007
    Kingston, Jamaica – When he crossed the finish line just after 7:30pm (EST) on Sunday 24 June, 20-year-old Usain St. Leo Bolt not only rewrote the Jamaican record books, erasing the oldest record but he appeared to have resuscitated what seemed to have been flagging confidence by a wide section of the Jamaican sporting public.
    Bolt who had broken the World Junior record in the 200m in April 2004, two years after becoming the youngest ever World Junior champion (15yrs 332days) when he won the 200m at the IAAF World Junior champion in Kingston, appeared destined to be another footnote in this history of track and field.
    Usain Bolt (JAM) in Kingston 2002
    (Getty Images) A series of injuries that threatened to derail his career, reports of hard partying and lack of interest in training had caused many to write him off as another over paid, spoiled athlete.
    The days of the clown are gone
    Sunday night (24 June) after crossing the line in 19.75 seconds to break the 35-year-old mark set by Olympic legend Don Quarrie in Cali, Colombia in August 1971, 15 years before he was even born, Bolt turned and ran to the front of the grandstand at the national championships where he soaked up the applause from the fans.
    Usain Bolt with his World Junior record clock
    (GrenadaSports) Flash back to two years ago at the second Jamaica International invitational where he high stepped across the finish line, head to one side before running into a crowd of fans where he was mobbed by adoring fans.
    Bolt with a new found maturity belying his age and even more confidence says the clowning around on the track is over. Gone also is the long silver chain he used to run with clamped between his jaws.
    “Personally I felt it was time to get serious,” he said in an interview less then 24 hours after he set the new Jamaican record.
    Wallace Spearmon next to Usain Bolt in New York
    (Victah Sailer) “Over the years I have learned a lot and it forces you to grow up quickly, I am hungry for a title under my belt and if you want to be a World champion you have to be serious, buckle down and do the work required,” said the Kingston IAAF High Performance Training Centre, athlete.
    This appeared nigh impossible a few years ago when it appeared he would be another flash in the pan and one who appeared hungry for attention.

    Coach help to sort things out
    These days he said his hunger is for a major title and while he stops just short of predicting a medal at the 11th IAAF World Championships in Athletics, Osaka, Japan, (25 Aug to 2 Sep), he states simply that he considers himself in the top three in the world right now and added that having studied his good friend, American Wallace Spearman, knows what it takes to beat him.
    Usain Bolt (JAM)
    (Errol Anderson (The Sporting Image)) It did not take an intervention to get him to see the light he said but rather he said, “pretty much it has been just my coach (Glen Mills) and myself,” who sorted things out.
    Bolt who has left a long trail of records and gold medals in his wake said “my coach talked to me a lot about maintaining focus” but it was his first hand experience that had the most effect. He said “after going on the circuit last year and seeing others like (American Tyson) Gay run fast it just really open your eyes really to see what is going on around you.”
    As fast as he is Bolt cannot outrun his party-animal reputation but says it has been over stated, “Yes there was some partying (but) I am young and I like to go out and enjoy myself. I work very hard and so I like to enjoy myself but I don’t overdo it as too much does not work with performing well on the track.”
    Usain Bolt (JAM)
    (Victah Sailer) Bolt who signed his first professional contract at age 17, just out of William Knibb memorial High School denied that his newfound wealth and popularity had anything to do with his partying.
    Nor will the new US seven figure four year contract extension with Puma influence to overdo things. As he sees it, he deserves all that is coming to him.
    “I am not that surprised because I think I deserve it as I have been working hard over the years and I am getting better all the time…if you work hard you will get paid and this is why we work hard” he explained.
    How fast does he think he can run this season? His quick answer was, “I don't know, I think I can get under 19.70 but can’t say exactly how fast.”
    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
    Che Guevara.

  • #2
    ATHLETICS: Bolt hungry for world title
    KINGSTON: The long silver chain that used to hang from his jaw like the bridle of a racehorse is gone as is the clowning around and the jumping into groups of fans after winning races.

    Newly-minted Jamaican 200 metre champion Usain Bolt is more determined than ever to be taken seriously. “Personally I just felt it was time to get serious. Over the years I have learned a lot and it forces you to grow up quickly,” said Bolt, who won the Jamaican title Sunday by clocking a 19.75 seconds. The 6ft 6in, 20 year-old speedster Bolt is continuing his preparation for this year’s IAAF World Athletics Championships in Osaka, Japan. Bolt says he is “hungry for a title” and realised that if he is to fulfill the potential he showed in 2002 when he became the youngest ever IAAF champion at 15, then “you have to buckle down and do the work.”

    During a recent interview Bolt spoke about what he has learned over the years and the long talks with coach Glen Mills. This newfound philosophy is in contrast to the happy-go-lucky teenager who was reportedly seen partying hard as a regular patron at several uptown clubs. “My coach talked to me a lot about maintaining a focus,” Bolt said. “And after going on the circuit last year and seeing others like (American Tyson) Gay run fast, it really opens your eyes.” Asked whether his newfound wealth and popularity after signing with athletic wear giant Puma at age 17 influence his partying habits, Bolt said “not really, I would still go out if I was broke as I like to enjoy myself.” After winning the gold at the 2002 World Junior Championships and then breaking the world junior record two years later at the CARIFTA Games in Hamilton, Bermuda, Bolt’s progress was halted by a series of injuries.

    This period in his life was “extremely frustrating.” But with his new-found wisdom, Bolt said he has learned “you just have to work hard and do things that will help to prevent injuries.” He recently put pen to paper to confirm a four-year extension to the Puma deal for a reported “US seven figures”. “My hard work is paying off and I am not surprised because I think I deserve it. I am getting better all the time. If you work hard then you will get paid. This is why we work hard.” afp
    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
    Che Guevara.

    Comment


    • #3
      Bolt-"Time to get serious"

      Bolt - “Time to get serious”

      Friday 29 June 2007
      Kingston, Jamaica – When he crossed the finish line just after 7:30pm (EST) on Sunday 24 June, 20-year-old Usain St. Leo Bolt not only rewrote the Jamaican record books, erasing the oldest record but he appeared to have resuscitated what seemed to have been flagging confidence by a wide section of the Jamaican sporting public.
      Bolt who had broken the World Junior record in the 200m in April 2004, two years after becoming the youngest ever World Junior champion (15yrs 332days) when he won the 200m at the IAAF World Junior champion in Kingston, appeared destined to be another footnote in this history of track and field.
      Usain Bolt (JAM) in Kingston 2002
      (Getty Images) A series of injuries that threatened to derail his career, reports of hard partying and lack of interest in training had caused many to write him off as another over paid, spoiled athlete.
      The days of the clown are gone
      Sunday night (24 June) after crossing the line in 19.75 seconds to break the 35-year-old mark set by Olympic legend Don Quarrie in Cali, Colombia in August 1971, 15 years before he was even born, Bolt turned and ran to the front of the grandstand at the national championships where he soaked up the applause from the fans.
      Usain Bolt with his World Junior record clock
      (GrenadaSports) Flash back to two years ago at the second Jamaica International invitational where he high stepped across the finish line, head to one side before running into a crowd of fans where he was mobbed by adoring fans.
      Bolt with a new found maturity belying his age and even more confidence says the clowning around on the track is over. Gone also is the long silver chain he used to run with clamped between his jaws.
      “Personally I felt it was time to get serious,” he said in an interview less then 24 hours after he set the new Jamaican record.
      Wallace Spearmon next to Usain Bolt in New York
      (Victah Sailer) “Over the years I have learned a lot and it forces you to grow up quickly, I am hungry for a title under my belt and if you want to be a World champion you have to be serious, buckle down and do the work required,” said the Kingston IAAF High Performance Training Centre, athlete.
      This appeared nigh impossible a few years ago when it appeared he would be another flash in the pan and one who appeared hungry for attention.

      Coach help to sort things out
      These days he said his hunger is for a major title and while he stops just short of predicting a medal at the 11th IAAF World Championships in Athletics, Osaka, Japan, (25 Aug to 2 Sep), he states simply that he considers himself in the top three in the world right now and added that having studied his good friend, American Wallace Spearman, knows what it takes to beat him.
      Usain Bolt (JAM)
      (Errol Anderson (The Sporting Image)) It did not take an intervention to get him to see the light he said but rather he said, “pretty much it has been just my coach (Glen Mills) and myself,” who sorted things out.
      Bolt who has left a long trail of records and gold medals in his wake said “my coach talked to me a lot about maintaining focus” but it was his first hand experience that had the most effect. He said “after going on the circuit last year and seeing others like (American Tyson) Gay run fast it just really open your eyes really to see what is going on around you.”
      As fast as he is Bolt cannot outrun his party-animal reputation but says it has been over stated, “Yes there was some partying (but) I am young and I like to go out and enjoy myself. I work very hard and so I like to enjoy myself but I don’t overdo it as too much does not work with performing well on the track.”
      Usain Bolt (JAM)
      (Victah Sailer) Bolt who signed his first professional contract at age 17, just out of William Knibb memorial High School denied that his newfound wealth and popularity had anything to do with his partying.
      Nor will the new US seven figure four year contract extension with Puma influence to overdo things. As he sees it, he deserves all that is coming to him.
      “I am not that surprised because I think I deserve it as I have been working hard over the years and I am getting better all the time…if you work hard you will get paid and this is why we work hard” he explained.
      How fast does he think he can run this season? His quick answer was, “I don't know, I think I can get under 19.70 but can’t say exactly how fast.”
      Paul Reid for the IAAF
      Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
      Che Guevara.

      Comment


      • #4
        A good read

        This puts his career into perspective....indeed a good read.
        Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

        Comment


        • #5
          let me refresh this
          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
            Can't talk to him at QUAD next week! Dun di place!


            BLACK LIVES MATTER

            Comment


            • #7
              LOL!!! Week after next..as he will be running in Europe for the season but serioulsy can you blame the man for celebrating?
              Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
              Che Guevara.

              Comment


              • #8
                No man! Is about time!

                Sickko, can you do us one favour? Please tell your colleagues to stop referring to him as "world junior record holder"? That was eons ago and he is now in a completely new phase of his career.

                Thanks!


                BLACK LIVES MATTER

                Comment


                • #9
                  He is still the World Junior Record Holder...cant take that away from him, Neville Myton who is almost 60 is still the National Junior Record holder in the 800m.

                  This morning the BBC mentioned that Bolt is the WJR and they still call Daryll Brown the WJR holder in the 100m as well
                  Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                  Che Guevara.

                  Comment

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