Bolt remains fastest


Jamaican sprinter earns seventh gold medal

Associated Press

RIO DE JANEIRO

Usain Bolt sauntered onto the track, stretched out his arms and waved his hands, signaling for more applause.

He knew how this night was going to go.

Bolt’s swan song in the Olympic 100 meters Sunday night was a no-doubter — a pedestrian-by-his-standards 9.81-second sprint down the straightaway, but not so slow that he couldn’t take time to point at his own chest with his thumb a step before he crossed the finish line.

“It was brilliant,” Bolt said. “I didn’t go so fast but I’m so happy I won. I told you guys I was going to do it.”

He won his record-setting third straight title in track’s featured event and his seventh Olympic gold.

He has already swept aside pretty much every sprinter who had any claim on being the greatest.

So, on a muggy night in Rio, Bolt took aim at Michael Phelps, shoving the swimmer and all his 23 medals to the background and made it official: The Bolt Games have begun.

“I told you guys I wanted to set myself apart from everybody else,” Bolt said. “This is the Olympics that I have to do it at.”

Bolt beat American Justin Gatlin, who was greeted by the fans with raucous boos, by .08 seconds. Andre de Grasse of Canada won the bronze.

Bolt has a chance for two more golds — in his favorite race, the 200 final Thursday, then in the 4x100 relay Saturday night.

He wasn’t the only one to put on a show Sunday.

A few minutes before his race, world champion Wayde van Niekerk of South Africa eclipsed what many thought was the most-unbreakable record in the book — Michael Johnson’s 17-year-old mark of 43.18 seconds in 400 meters.

Running out of Lane 8, where the lag puts him well in front of the rest of the field, van Niekerk never saw a soul — crossing in 43.03 and only glancing to his left when he approached the line to peer at the clock, which showed him what he had done.

“Usain Bolt will be retiring soon, but this could be the next star of the sport,” Johnson said during his commentary on BBC.

But Bolt isn’t done quite yet.

The 6-foot-5 sprinter/celebrity overcame his typically slow unfurling from the blocks — he was second-to-last after the break.

“I just said, ‘Take your time, and chip away,” he said.

Churning his legs to gradually build up speed, he eventually caught Gatlin with about 40 meters left and took it to warp speed. The rest was a matter of how hard he wanted to run to the line.

Gatlin pursued him gamely, the way he has for years. He said the short turnaround between the semifinal and final sapped his strength.

“Once we got back to the second call, we really only had 30 minutes to get ready for the finals,” Gatlin said.

He finished with silver to go with his 2004 gold and 2102 bronze and, at 34, became the oldest man to win a medal in a non-relay sprint. And while Bolt was celebrating with anyone he could find, Gatlin was parading the American flag around the track virtually alone. The boos from the Brazilian crowd were the latest ugly chapter in Gatlin’s saga. He’s been caught for doping twice. His last ban ended in 2010. But fans in the stadium bought into the “Good vs. Evil” story line that’s been pitched by the media for all these years, and they let the American have it.

“That’s the first time I’ve gone into a stadium and they’ve started to boo,” Bolt said. “It surprised me.”

A split-second after he crossed, Bolt raised the index finger, and then, the real party began.