Bolt shoots out world’s warning
by Luke PHILLIPS
ATHLETICS: PARIS, July 18, 2009:- Sprint king Usain Bolt fired out a
warning to rivals ahead of the World Athletics Championships by cruising
to a meet record of 9.79 seconds in the 100m at the Golden League event
here on Friday.

Jamaica’s Usain Bolt celebrates after winning the men’s 100m
event of the Paris IAAF Golden League meeting on Friday at the
Stade de France in Saint-Denis, near Paris. Bolt won the event
ahead of Antigua and Barbuda’s Daniel Bailey and Jamaica’s Yohan
Blake. (AFP) |
Jamaica’s triple Olympic champion had a terrible start in wet
conditions at the Stade de France but once his head came up after 40
metres, he powered his enormous frame away from the rest of the field in
an ominous sign for next month’s worlds in Berlin.
“I felt I did well,” said the 22-year-old. “I’m happy. I had a bad
start but I ended up with a good time.”
Asked about the upcoming world championships he replied: “I’m always
ready, no matter the conditions. The only thing I’ve got to work on is
my start.”
He added: “With this weather the important thing is not to get
injured.
“I run next at Crystal Palace (in London, July 25) then the worlds.
I’d say I’m 85 percent and there’s still work to do.”
Bolt’s training partner Daniel Bailey of Antigua and 19-year-old
Jamaican Yohan Blake also posted sub-10sec races in 9.91 and 9.93
respectively.
Bolt’s time was the second fastest this season after triple world
champion Tyson Gay of the United States, who recorded 9.77sec into a
headwind in Rome, and smashed the meet record of 9.85sec set in 2006 by
compatriot Asafa Powell.
Away from the blue riband event, all four contenders for the
one-million-dollar Golden League jackpot for the athlete who wins all
six races in their discipline throughout the season won again here, the
fourth of the six-leg series.
Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia cruised to an impressive 3000m win in
7min 28.64sec, 4.51sec ahead of Kenyan-born American Bernard Lagat. “I’m
very satisfied to still be in the race for the jackpot,” grinned Bekele.
In terrible conditions for pole vaulting, Russian Yelena Isinbayeva
took just one vault at 4.65m to seal the win and make sure she stayed in
the race while Jamaican Kerron Stewart posted her fourth consecutive
100m win in 10.99sec.
“The wind was turning around and around,” Isinbayeva said. “It was
difficult to produce a great performance under those kind of
conditions.”
On a good night for American athletes, Sanya Richards also ensured
she stayed on course for the jackpot with victory in the women’s 400m in
49.34sec, more than one gaping second ahead of her rivals.
Richards, who lost out on Olympic gold to Britain’s Christine
Ohuruogu, said: “Honestly, I am very satisfied with my victory. It was
cold tonight and I am proud I ran under 50sec.”
Her feat was repeated by her compatriot Jeremy Wariner, the Beijing
Olympic silver medallist who claimed double gold at the Athens Olympics
and also at the two last world champs in Osaka and Helsinki, in the
men’s event.
Wariner won in 45.28sec, a mighty 1.42sec off the meet best he set
last year.
“I won, which is great because I’m still undefeated in the stadium,”
Wariner said. “Obviously I am not ready (for the worlds) but it will
come.”
In the absence of Olympic champion Dayron Robles, another American,
Dexter Faulk, stole the thunder of France’s 2005 world champion Ladji
Doucoure by storming to a 13.14sec win in the 110m hurdles to follow up
on his victory in Berlin.
And the 25-year-old Faulk promised more to come: “The time is
excellent but I did make some mistakes. I’m sure I can go faster, so you
will see some nice things from me in the future.”
In the women’s 100m hurdles, Olympic champion Dawn Harper, also of
the United States, triumphed in 12.68sec in a close finish ahead of
France’s Sandra Gomis.
“This victory will give me a lot of confidence on the way to the
worlds in Berlin,” she said, having overcome a terrible start. Croatian
Blanka Vlasic claimed the high jump title with a best of 1.99m in a
competition again hampered by the adverse conditions.
AFP
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