BEIJING, Aug. 26 -- Athletics got the hero it has
been craving for years when Usain Bolt lit up the Bird's Nest with his
brilliance, his 100m victory ensconced as one of the images of the 2008 Olympic
Games.
After years of one depressing doping scandal after another, the Games began with many leading figures warning
that athletics was in real danger of alienating its fans forever and with it,
losing its place as the heart and soul of the Olympics.
Bolt's stunning performances, and the excitement of
the build-up to his races, ensured that, for sprinting at least, things are
looking good.
When the 100m heats began on the first morning of
competition lips were being licked at the prospect of the three-way showdown
between Bolt, world champion Tyson Gay and former world record holder Asafa
Powell, the three fastest men ever.
Yet by the time the final came round the following
night there was only going to be one winner.
Even so, Bolt's performance in breaking his own world
record in 9.69sec, and the chest-thumping celebratory way he did it, thrilled
the world.
When he put his head down to drive through the line
and erase Michael Johnson's untouchable 12-year-old mark in the 200m with a run
of 19.30 seconds, any doubters would have realized they were in the presence of
greatness.
A third gold medal and a third crushing world record
after an eye-defying third leg in the 4x100m relay completed his haul.
Bolt, who turned 22 the day after his 200 win and had
91,000 people singing him "Happy Birthday" as he stood on the podium, is a
performer and a character most sports would die for.
However, IOC President Jacques Rogge chided him for a
lack of sportsmanship for tearing off on his victory lap instead of waiting to
shake hands with his beaten opponents. Bolt said he just wanted to have fun.
"Everybody should enjoy their job. The crowd loves
it. They look for me to see me coming out. I just go out and give them a show,"
Bolt said.
In contrast, Lamine Diack, head of the International
Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), had nothing but praise for the
jewel in his midst.
Diack said Bolt had had more impact than any other
athlete in Games history.
"He is great for our sport, he can help to build up
our sport," Diack said. "He was fantastic, we are very privileged to have this."
Bolt's triple whammy was only part of a fantastic
athletics program for Jamaica, who took a clean sweep of the four sprint titles
en route to six golds and 11 medals in all.
Its success, and Bolt's superhuman performances,
invariably raised the question of doping, particularly as the 100m has been
dogged horribly in that regard for so long.
Jamaica shines
Bolt, however, which won the world junior
championships 200m at 15 and was the first junior to break 20 seconds, has
hardly come out of the blue, and he dismissed the idea out of hand.
"I've been tested so many times in the competition
I've lost count," he said. "We know we're good, we know we're clean. We work
hard and any time you want to test us, it's okay."
The IAAF has been carrying out extensive testing in
Jamaica, which does not have its own accredited anti-doping system, and has
reported no suspicious patterns.
Other countries' athletes preparing to return to a
glorious welcome were Ethiopia and Kenya, who were imperious in the distance
events.
Ethiopian duo Kenenisa Bekele and Tirunesh Dibaba
both took the 10,000-5,000m double while Kenya claimed five golds, capped when
Sammy Wanjiru brought the east African country its long-desired first marathon
title.
Jamaica's six golds left it third in the athletics
medal standings behind Russia (six, but more silvers) and the United States
(seven) but it was not all rosy for the sport's superpower.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)