Over
darkened Beijing skies, a moment of blinding light. For two years
Justin Gatlin has been the undisputed king of sprinting as well as
athletics’ most controversial character, but cometh the hour, cometh
Usain Bolt – but by the narrowest of margins.
Usain Bolt beats Justin Gatlin in 100m final: World Athletics Championships – live!
Gatlin
is famed not only for having failed two doping tests but also for his
explosive starts, while Bolt tends to rise from his blocks like a man
who has overslept on a rock hard mattress. This time though there was
little in it at the gun or at 40, 50, 60, 70 and even 80 metres. But as
they approached the line, Gatlin lost his balance while Bolt kept his
nerve. In the end a width of vest separated them with Bolt winning in
9.79sec, from Gatlin in 9.80. The Canadian Andre De Grasse and the
19-year-old American Trayvon Bromell shared the bronze medal in 9.92.
Bolt
said: “It definitely means a lot because I’ve been struggling all
season. It took me a while to discover what was the problem. And it’s
all held together so I’m just happy.”
The Jamaican, who has now
won nine world titles over 100m, 200m and the 4x100m relay, was also
asked how important his victory was given Gatlin’s past: “For me, I
understand why but I wanted to do it for myself. It was a big deal.”
For
nearly two years athletics had waited for this track-and-field super
fight – with Gatlin having gone into the final with an unbeaten streak
that stretched back over 28 races and Bolt also unbeaten over 100m –
except when easing down in heats – since being outrun by Gatlin in Rome
in June 2013. As they say in boxing, somebodies O had to go, and while
the winning time was nothing special the occasion certainly was.
At
the start both men acted like boxers, rolling their necks and puffing
out their cheeks. When he was introduced, Bolt covered his eyes with his
hands before opening them and smiling; Gatlin shot imaginary bullets
with his fingers before roaring into the camera.
Jessica Ennis-Hill wins heptathlon gold at Beijing World Championships
The
race was a slugfest too, with both men hammering it to the line – until
Gatlin blinked. Five times this year he has run faster than 9.80, but
when the pressure was on and the adrenaline blasting through his veins
he wasn’t able to produce his very best.
“Really, I gave it
away,” he said. “I stumbled in the last five metres, my arms got a
little flaily. But I’m happy to come so close and to represent my
country.”
However he denied that the pressure had got to him.
“No, I’ve had pressure since 2011,” he said. “You have to come out and
run and over the last five metres it wasn’t my day to do so. You have to
focus on yourself, keep within yourself. Whether he came out with his A
game or his B game, I had to be on top of mine. I leaned a little too
far forward, and I got a little off balance.”
But he also paid
tribute to Bolt, saying: “He’s a gamer. He’s a showman. Anyone who goes
to the line to go against him has to be ready to go to work. In those
five metres I let things get away from me. I stumbled a little, and it
cost me the race.”
Bolt left the stadium sporting the broadest
smile. It was in the Bird’s Nest in 2008 that he first announced himself
as a global superstar, by winning Olympic 100m and 200m gold in world
record times. And after a difficult couple of years, where he has been
beset by injuries, it was once again where he found his wings.
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