Lightning strikes again as Bolt wins 200


His time of 19.30 seconds broke the world mark that many felt would last longer.

BEIJING (AP) — Usain Bolt’s eyes darted to check the numbers on the trackside clock once, twice, three times, more.

For the only time in eight races at these Olympics, Bolt was really trying — gritting his teeth, pumping his arms, churning his golden spikes with those long, long legs. In the closing steps of the 200-meter final Wednesday night, with no other runner nearby, Bolt trained those mischief-loving eyes on the bright numbers he knew would ultimately define what already was a sublime performance.

And so he lunged at the finish. Yes, all alone out front, 25 feet clear of the nearest competitor, his second gold medal of the Beijing Games assured, the Jamaican dipped his head and thrust his 6-foot-5 frame through the last step of a sprint as special as the world has seen. Bolt leaned forward as if trying to edge an opponent who’d matched him stride for stride.

Just past the line, Bolt twisted his torso and turned his head around for one more glance at those numbers. Like everyone else who was watching, Bolt needed to be sure HE could believe what he saw.

The final tally on that clock was truly astounding. Bolt’s time of 19.30 seconds broke the world record of 19.32 set by Michael Johnson at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, a world record that so many were so sure would last far longer than it did.

“I just blew my mind,” Bolt said, “and blew the world’s mind.”

He lifted his arms, then fell on his back, exhausted and exhilarated.

The milestone was magical.

The moment, too.

The medal? Consider this one of those once-in-a-generation instances at an Olympics where it was an afterthought, even if Bolt did put himself alongside U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps — the man with a record eight golds in Beijing — in forging one of the lasting memories from these Summer Games.

Even if Bolt is the first man since Carl Lewis in 1984 to win the 100 and 200 golds at a single Olympics, and the only man ever to do it by breaking world records in both.

“I was, like, looking at myself,” Bolt said of checking out the overhead video scoreboards, “and I was like, ’That guy’s fast!”’

The official results show that seven other men, including Shawn Crawford and Kim Collins, Walter Dix and Wallace Spearmon, were also competing this day, were also trodding that same Bird’s Nest track, were also running as hard as they could, nearly as fast as anyone ever has.

Crawford was the defending Olympic champion. Collins was the 2003 world champion. Dix won a bronze in the 100 behind Bolt on Saturday. Spearmon owns two world championship medals in the 200 and ranked as the fourth-fastest man in the distance’s history — yes, faster than Bolt’s previous best of 19.67 — until Wednesday.

No one provided a challenge.

Heck, no one finished within a half-second, an eternity in a race of this length.

And after two runners, Churandy Martina of Netherlands Antilles and Spearmon of the United States, were disqualified for running out of their lanes, the official results had silver medalist Crawford of the U.S. behind by 0.66 second — the biggest margin of victory in a 200 final at any Olympics. The DQs left Dix, another American, with bronze.

“I’ve been dreaming of this since I was yea high,” Bolt said. “So it means a lot more to me actually than the 100 means.”