Bolt sets world alight again
by Luke PHILLIPS
ATHLETICS: PARIS, Dec 19, 2009:Jamaica's Usain Bolt was again the
highlight of a thrilling year of athletics, claiming triple gold and a
double sprint record at the World Athletics Championships in August.
Bolt, who had in 2008 set the Beijing Olympics alight with a treble
gold showing in record time, again lived up to top billing in Berlin.
The 21-year-old, whose razzmatazz and light-heartedness have offered
a much-needed breath of fresh air to the world of athletics, shattered
his own world records for the 100m and 200m, clocking 9.58 and 19.19sec
respectively, while Jamaica again won the 4x100m relay to complete his
hat-trick of gold medals.
Bolt "may now be the most famous sportsman in the world, not just in
athletics", concluded Lamine Diack, head of world athletics' ruling body
the International Athletics Associations Federation (IAAF).
Despite Bolt's haul, it was the United States which again headed the
medals table with 10 gold, six silver and six bronze medals for a total
haul of 22 at the championships, which featured 1,984 athletes from 201
territories.
Jamaica were in second on 13 (7, 4, 2), Kenya third on 11 (4, 5, 2)
and Russia in fourth with 13 (4, 3, 6).
Bolt's individual sprint double was emulated by Ethiopian Kenenisa
Bekele, who reinforced his credentials as arguably the best distance
runner ever when he won gold in both the 5000 and 10,000m, repeating his
Beijing Games double. His victory in the 10,000m was the fourth in
succession and matched the record set by former mentor Haile
Gebrselassie.
Controversy was provided by South African teenager Caster Semenya,
who thrashed the field to claim gold in the women's 800m event.
Semenya's rapid speed gains, however, prompted questions over her
gender. Leaked test results said Semenya was a hermaphrodite, sparking
anger from the South African public and government.
Semenya was allowed to keep her gold medal, and the results of her
controversial gender testing were not made public.
Biggest shock
Arguably the biggest shock of the world championships was the failure
of Russian Yelena Isinbayeva to win a third successive pole vault crown.
After losing a competition for the first time in six years just
before the championships, she amazingly failed to land one of her three
attempts.
But she rebounded at the Zurich leg of the Golden League shortly
after the worlds, setting a new world record of 5.06 metres to better
her previous best mark of 5.05m set at the Beijing Olympics.
Doping again reared its ugly head, the highest profile case being
that of Bahrain's Moroccan-born middle distance runner Rashid Ramzi, who
was stripped of his Beijing 1500m gold after testing positive for a new
form of the banned blood booster EPO-CERA.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) also decided not to
re-award the women's 100m gold medal at the 2000 Sydney Games, which was
stripped from drug cheat Marion Jones two years ago.
In line with IOC practice, controversial Greek sprinter Katerina
Thanou, who finished second behind Jones in Sydney, would have been
expected to receive the gold medal.
No gold - only 2 silvers
Instead, the record books will show no gold in the flagship women's
sprint at Sydney but two silvers, with the IOC unwilling to upgrade
Thanou who was in subsequent years immersed in controversy over doping
related issues.
Ethiopia and Kenya shared the spoils at the World Cross-Country
Championships in Amman in March as African runners swept the medals
board.
Gebre-egziabher Gebremariam made up for the absence of compatriot and
defending champion Kenenisa Bekele to win the senior men's event.
With Ethiopia's defending champion Tirunesh Dibaba also absent in the
women's race, Florence Kiplagat claimed the first victory for Kenya
since 1994. Kenya topped Ethiopia in the overall team podiums for both
events, Eritrea taking third in the men's and Portugal in the women's.
Bolt's crowning as the new sprint king has also synched comfortably with
the IAAF's launch of the Diamond League, a 14-meet series that will
replace the six-leg Golden League and associated Grand Prix events. AFP
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