Bolt bids farewell to Olympics with nine golds
Usain Bolt bid farewell to the Olympics by powering to a
record third straight sweep of the sprint medals and a final chance to
declare himself “the greatest.”
No one had the power on the track nor the courage off it to contradict the 29-year-old whose blistering run gave Jamaica victory in the 4x100m relay.
No one had the power on the track nor the courage off it to contradict the 29-year-old whose blistering run gave Jamaica victory in the 4x100m relay.
Allyson Felix hit her own landmark with a fifth gold as
the US women won their 4x100m relay, a day after winning a reprieve into
the final.
The track drama Friday and the prospect of a Brazil
football final on Saturday almost overcame the shame felt by many
Olympians after star swimmer Ryan Lochte had to apologise for inventing a
story that he had been mugged in Rio.
Victory was not guaranteed when Bolt took the baton for the
anchor leg, but he powered down the straight to cross in 37.27sec before
soaking up the acclaim from an adoring crowd. A surprise Japan quartet
came second, followed by the United States, who were disqualified to
give Canada bronze.
A third straight 100m, 200m and 4x100m clean sweep put
Bolt alongside Carl Lewis and Paavo Nurmi on nine track and field
Olympic golds.
Bolt, who said at the start of the week that he would be an
“immortal” if he claimed the ‘triple triple,’ had no doubt that he
deserves more acclaim.
“There you go. I’m the greatest,” said the Jamaican, who kissed the finish line as he played to the crowd and the cameras.
And how did he achieve greatness? “Dedication. I wanted it the most. I was never satisfied.”
“I hope I’ve set the bar high enough that no one can do it
again,” said Bolt whose departure is a second blow to the Olympics
after the retirement of swimming legend Michael Phelps with his 23
career golds.
The United States women’s sprint team brilliantly beat Jamaica to complete a remarkable comeback from disqualification.
Felix, long jump gold medallist Tianna Bartoletta, English
Gardner and Tori Bowie combined to clock the second fastest 4x100m
relay ever run, in 41.01 seconds. Felix is the first women athlete to
reach five golds.

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