LONDON (Reuters) - Usain Bolt
has little time to bask in his extraordinary 100 metres victory as the
Jamaican now turns his attention to the event he loves the most, the
200m, where once again he is aiming to break new ground.
On Sunday, the Jamaican became the only man to cross the line
first in two 100m finals, putting him notionally ahead of Carl Lewis,
who won in 1984 and was awarded gold in 1988 after the disqualification
of Ben Johnson.
Now he hopes to become the first man to win two 200m golds, by
any method, and position himself as unquestionably the greatest sprinter
in history.
In Beijing, Bolt became the ninth man to complete the 100m/200m
double, both titles coming in world record time, and he knows exactly
what is at stake now.
"I'm never going to say that I'm the greatest until I've run my
200 metres," he said soon after his 9.63 victory on Sunday, the
second-fastest 100m of all time.
"It was all about this, to defend my titles, because this is what's going to make me a legend."
For all the eye-catching glory of Bolt's 9.58 100m world record
at the 2009 world championships, his 19.19 200m was arguably the better
performance.
Which makes Yohan Blake's 19.26 in Brussels last year all the
more startling and suggests the same two men will be fighting it out
again for gold and silver in Thursday's final after Blake followed his
training partner home in the 100m.
With his hamstring fully healed, bolt will be able to go all out and
fired a warning to the young pretender who beat the master over both
distances in the Jamaican trials.
"I told Yohan the 200m will be different because that is my pet event," Bolt said. "I'm not going to let him beat me again."
Having spent more than two hours on media and autograph-signing duties on Sunday, Bolt said he needed to "rest up".
Though newspaper pictures of him celebrating with friends at 3
a.m. suggested he was in no immediate rush to hit the hay ahead of the
heats that get under way early on Tuesday.
American Wallace Spearmon, who finished third in Beijing but was
then disqualified for stepping out of his lane, is probably the best of
the rest, with Frenchman Christophe Lemaitre carrying Europe's outside
hopes.
-Reuters