LIFE AFTER BOLT: NEW-LOOK JAMAICA FAIL COMMONWEALTH TEST
Jamaica's pre-race favourite Yohan Blake (R) finished third in the 100 metres. |
As sprint legend Usain Bolt
partied into the early hours and hung out with movie stars at the Commonwealth
Games, it wasn't so much fun for the Jamaica track team he left behind.
At their first major
competition since Bolt retired after a decade of dominance, the Jamaican
juggernaut caught a flat on the Gold Coast, failing to win a single sprinting
gold medal.
Yohan Blake's flop
in the men's 100 metres set the tone as Jamaica's confidence was immediately
dented by South African Akani Simbine.
Blake, who picked up
a world title in 2011 after Bolt false-started, could only finish third behind
Simbine's countryman Henricho Bruintjies after a calamitous start.
To add insult to
injury, double Olympic champion Elaine Thompson failed to win a medal in the
women's 200m as Shaunae Miller-Uibo romped to victory for the Bahamas.
And with Trinidad
and Tobago's Jereem Richards capturing gold in the men's 200m and countrywoman
Michelle-Lee Ahye an upset winner of the women's 100m, Jamaica's Caribbean
rivals enjoyed their days in the sun.
Jamaica's Olympic
chief insisted that there was no crisis, pointing to a new generation of
sprinters coming through.
"It was a
perfectly creditable performance," Christopher Samuda told "Jamaican athletes usually peak in June or July.
"Usain Bolt had
a very big influence but we have a wealth of talent and the future for Jamaican
sprinting is in very good hands."
But after the
Jamaican men's 4x100m relay team were crushed by England to take third behind
South Africa in a puny title defence, Bolt took to social media to question
whether he had retired too soon.
"Watching the
relay just now made me ask myself a few questions," tweeted the eight-time
Olympic champion, who watched part of the athletics with Hollywood heartthrob
Chris Hemsworth.
FEAR FACTOR
Blake insisted he
would bounce back this season.
"I was in
record-breaking shape, and I'm still in that," he said. "We were
dominating worldwide, and my coach is working to get me back to that level so I
can dominate again."
While Jamaica
appeared to have lost the fear factor, Blake dismissed the threat to their
recent sprinting dominance.
"It's not that
they're getting better," he said. "It's that we're not
performing."
England's sprinters
stormed to a golden double in the 4x100 metres relays, boding well for the
British at the European championships in August.
Zharnel Hughes,
stripped of gold in the 200m for impeding Richards, could be one to watch in
Berlin after showing impressive speed in Australia.
South Africa's
Caster Semenya completed a middle-distance double as rival athletes continued
to grumble about whether or not she should be allowed to compete.
But with her future
still clouded by controversy, Semenya -- who identifies as a woman but has
unusually elevated testosterone levels -- revealed she could be tempted to step
up from the 800 and 1,500 metres and tackle longer distances.
The track and field
threw up its fair share of feel-good stories -- from Neeraj Chopra, the
farmer's son who won a historic javelin gold for India, to Levern Spencer, who
captured the women's high jump title to give Saint Lucia their first
Commonwealth title in any sport.
But for Jamaica,
life after Bolt began with a jolt -- one that could ultimately change the
landscape of world sprinting.
SOURCE: AFP
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