Tag Archive | "Jamaica"

Usain Bolt - Olympic Sprint Champion Visits David Letterman

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Usain Bolt on Letterman 9/25/08

Bolt Celebrates Early…Way TOO EARLY!

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Barack ‘Usain Bolt’ Obama

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Barack Usain Bolt Obama
   [Barack Usain Bolt Obama]
   [Cartoon By R.J. Matson]

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Beijing Olympics Video - Record Breaking Moments

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Usain Bolt Breaks The 100m Record at the Beijing Olympics

Usain Bolt Breaks The 200m Record at the Beijing Olympics

Jamaica’s Veronica Campbell-Brown wins Women’s 200m Gold

Men’s 400m relay - Jamaica smashes World Record! Usain Bolt’s third

Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser wins the women’s 100m

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Usain Bolt grabs third gold and record

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Olympic 100m and 200m champion Usain Bolt won a third gold in the men’s 4×100m as Jamaica stormed home in a new world record.

Usain Bolt and Jamaican Relay Team

Watch video at NBCOlympics.com

Bolt capped his spectacular Summer Games by tearing through his portion of the 400-meter relay Friday night, setting up Jamaica’s victory in 37.10 seconds to break a 16-year-old world record.

It was the perfect way to end a weeklong coming-out party that began with a world record of 9.69 in the 100 meters Saturday, followed by a world record of 19.30 in the 200 meters Wednesday.

“The greatest Olympics ever,” Bolt called it.

Who could argue?

Bolt joins quite a list: The only other men to win gold medals in the 100, 200 and the sprint relay at one Olympics were Carl Lewis in 1984, Bobby Morrow in 1956 and Jesse Owens in 1936. None of those greats set world records in either the 100 or 200, though, much less both.

“People can only dream of doing what he’s done. He’s basically cemented himself as a legend of track and field,” said Bolt’s relay teammate Michael Frater. “I don’t think any performance can top what he’s done here.”

He won the 100 by 0.20, then the 200 by 0.66. The margin in the relay, 0.96 over second-place Trinidad and Tobago, was the biggest in that event at the Olympics since 1936. Japan was third.

“We simply couldn’t compete,” Trinidad and Tobago’s Marc Burns said.

The relay actually was close after Nesta Carter ran the first leg for Jamaica, and Frater the second. Bolt changed that quickly, putting his team way out in front, even if he wasn’t running the leg he hoped.

“Usain wanted to start. He wanted to lay the hammer down from the start,” Frater said. “The coaches wanted him to run the third leg. We listened to the coaches.”

Good call.

After passing along the baton to anchor Asafa Powell — no small feat, if you ask the U.S. teams that bungled exchanges in qualifying a night earlier, or the Jamaican women, who did the same thing earlier Friday — Bolt pointed at Powell and yelled encouragement. Even as Bolt slowed in his lane, his work done, the other teams’ anchors couldn’t catch him for about 30 meters — that’s how big Jamaica’s lead was.

The Jamaicans shattered the old mark of 37.40, originally set by a U.S. team that included Lewis at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, then matched by another American quartet in 1993.

With that latest gold and world record secured, Bolt went into his now-familiar postrace routine. He yanked off his golden spikes and did a barefoot dance. He pointed his fingers to the sky, pantomiming an archer’s stance.

This time, though, thrilled to be part of a team effort, he added a new wrinkle, chest-bumping Powell, the man who held the 100 record for three years until this kid came along. It was Powell’s first Olympic medal.

“I said to Asafa, ‘Can we do this?’” Bolt recounted, “and he was like, ‘Don’t worry, mon, we got this one.’”

Not that it’s all that easy to get a baton all the way around a track, not at high speed, at the Olympics, with the world watching. How else to explain all of the goof-ups? First by the U.S. men in qualifying Thursday — which is why they weren’t on the track to push Bolt, Powell and Co. in the final — then by the U.S. women in 400 qualifying and then by the Jamaican women in the 400 final.

That last error wiped out the Caribbean island’s bid to become only the second country to go 6-for-6 in the sprinting events at an Olympics; the United States won the men’s and women’s 100s, 200s and 400 relays at the 1984 Los Angeles Games, which were boycotted by the Soviet Union.

Still, 5-of-6 ain’t bad. Consider the flip side: The United States will leave an Olympics 0-for-6 in the sprint races for the first time.

“All I can say is: Yo, Jamaican sprinters, taking over the world,” Bolt said.

The Jamaicans were overwhelming favorites in the women’s 400 relay final, given that their squad boasted the 100 (Shelly-Ann Fraser) and 200 (Veronica Campbell-Brown) champions, along with the women who tied for silver in the 100 (Kerron Stewart and Sherone Simpson).

Second-leg runner Simpson tried to hand off the stick, vigorously shaking her hand forward, and Stewart tried to grab it, forcefully thrusting her hand backward, but they simply could not get the exchange done. Eventually, they bumped into each other, and Jamaica was disqualified. Russia won in 42.31.

As the replays of the miscue ran repeatedly on the overhead video boards, Simpson, Stewart and anchor Campbell-Brown watched and discussed what happened.

Even with that disappointment, Jamaica’s six overall gold medals in track and field are one more than the U.S. team, which got No. 5 from Bryan Clay in the decathlon Friday.

“I’d love for this to be a spark for the decathlon,” said Clay, the 2004 Olympic silver medalist, “and bring it back to the forefront.”

There were those who wondered whether doping cases like hers would define track and field at the 2008 Olympics. Instead, Bolt provided the longest-lasting memories, with his excellence and his exuberance.

The only thing International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge had to worry about was whether the Jamaican was having too good a time. Instead of thanking Bolt, Rogge chastised him, saying the sprinter didn’t show enough respect for his opponents and engaged in too much “Look at me” hot-dogging.

Bolt shrugged off the criticism.

“The crowd loves it — they love when I put on a show for them,” Bolt said. “They come out and pay their money to see a good performance and also to see a personality. So I go out there and give them a show.”

Oh, does he ever.

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Jamaica’s Usain Bolt wins 200m — Breaks world record again!

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   Usain Bolt Breaks 200m Record In Beijing
Usain Bolt Breaks 200m Record In BeijingBEIJING — A sprint double was all too predictable. To make the Olympics absolutely special, Usain Bolt added a world record double Wednesday by winning the gold medal in the 200 meters.

Already well ahead coming off a tight bend that was supposed to be his only challenge, the Jamaican didn’t slow for the first time in the games and bettered the world record of Michael Johnson — one that even the track great considered still out of reach.

With his time of 19.30 seconds, he sliced .02 off the mark dating to the 1996 Atlanta Games. And, incredibly, he cut his personal best by a massive .37.

On the eve of his 22nd birthday, Bolt did the celebrating early. In a sport dominated by hundreds of seconds, he beat the field by over half a second.

All too far behind him, Churandy Martina of the Netherlands Antilles took silver in 19.82. Defending champion Shawn Crawford got bronze 19.96.

Never letting up, Bolt dipped at the finish line and once he saw the record was gone, he fell to the track, his giant legs and arms pointing every which way.

“He is Superman 2,” Johnson said on the BBC said after he saw his record fall….[MORE >>]

Previous Record Holder — Michael Johnson: 200m in 1996: Michael Johnson sets the world record in the 200m at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

Bolt Blasts Into History
Bolt Blasts Into History

Bolt has absolutely decimated all before him - has he now changed sprinting?

After his sensational win Bolt said:

“It’s great. I have a great feeling.”

“This is a dream come true. You come out every day to be a champion and I’m just happy.”

“I told everybody I would leave everything on the track and I did just that.”

“I’ve proved I’m a true champion and that with hard work anything is possible.”

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