Jamaican sprint star Usain Bolt is facing a race against time to be
fit in his bid for an unprecedented third treble Olympic gold with the
Rio Games just five weeks away.
Bolt withdrew from the 100m final of the Jamaican Olympic Trials on
Friday with what the reigning Olympic champion described as a mildly
torn left hamstring.
The prospect of the 29-year-old 100 and 200m world record holder,
seeking his third consecutive Olympic titles in the 100, 200 and 4x100m
relay, missing the Games will rightly give organisers and fans
palpitations.
Bolt enjoys near-mythical status in athletics, his track performances
making the six-time Olympic gold medallist one of global sport’s most
recognisable faces, a surefire crowd draw.
He also represents the image of “clean” athletics at a time when the
sport is being dragged through the mud over state-sponsored Russian
doping linked to widespread corruption within world governing body the
IAAF.
All parties interested in the Olympics will be hoping all is done to
ensure the presence of one of the world’s highest paid athletes in Rio.
Unlike the United States, where only the top three finishers in any
event are selected, Jamaica employs a more flexible rule whereby
athletes can still be chosen if they meet certain criteria.
To fall into that category, the athlete must be top ranking, produce a
medical exemption and be able to prove fitness before the Games.
“Athletes who are ranked/listed in the top three in the world for
their event who are ill or injured at the time of the National
Championships and are granted an exemption from competing at the
Championships may still be considered for selection provided that they
are able to prove their world ranking form prior to the final submission
of the entries for the competition,” state the Jamaican athletics
federation’s rules.
Bolt clocked 9.88 seconds over 100m at a meeting in Kingston on June 11, the second-fastest time in the world this year.
But it is less than clear in the 200m, Bolt not having raced his
self-professed favoured event this season, so not figuring in the top
three in the world.
The Jamaican likely must now prove his fitness over 200m at the
Diamond League meet July 22 in London to have a hope of running the
event in Rio.
That means a tight 20-day recovery period, something not lost on Bolt.
“Starting the recovery process right away,” the sprinter tweeted
Saturday along with two photos of him seemingly receiving electrotherapy
treatment on his left hamstring.
Bolt had explained that he had felt “discomfort in my hamstring after
the first round last night and then again in the semi-final tonight”.
“I was examined by the Chief Doctor of the National Championships and diagnosed with a Grade 1 tear.
“I have submitted a medical exemption to be excused from the 100m final and the remainder of the National Championships.”
A grade one tear is classified as the most minor of hamstring
injuries. Grade two is typically a partial tear with grade three a
complete tear that might require months to heal.
JAAA secretary-general Garth Gayle warned Friday that unless Bolt
showed up for his 200m heat at the trials on Saturday he could lose that
place on the Olympic team.
AFP
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