Bolt still has something to prove in 100 meters

BRUSSELS -- Usain Bolt still has plenty to run for when he settles into the blocks for the 100 meters Friday at the Van Damme Memorial.

The Jamaican sprinter, who was disqualified from the 100 at the world championships for a false start, has only the sixth-best time of the year at 9.85 seconds. But in his last race of the season, Bolt will be looking to beat the season's top time of 9.78 seconds run by teammate Asafa Powell.

Despite a poor start in Zagreb on Tuesday in his first race since the worlds, Bolt clocked 9.85, only 0.07 seconds shy of Powell's mark. And the world-record holder will compete on one of his favorite tracks in King Baudouin Stadium, where he a ran blistering 9.77 seconds into a headwind three years ago.

"It should be good," Bolt said shortly after arriving from Zagreb. "Definitely. I think I can do it. I've run very fast on this track."

Weather predictions call for ideal conditions Friday. Challengers to Bolt will be Jamaican teammate Nesta Carter and American rival Justin Gatlin.

No one doubts Bolt's speed once he hits full stride -- it's his release from the blocks that has been the problem this season.

In a stunning few seconds at the world championships late last month, Bolt jumped the gun in the 100 final before Jamaican teammate Yohan Blake won gold. It was a huge surprise that Bolt blamed on a bout of anxiety at the worst moment.

He has not false started since, but looked hesitant and slow out of the block in all his other races.

"It is hard to put it out because it is really fresh, but I have to deal with it," Bolt said.

In Zagreb, he reacted slowly to the gun and trailed veteran Kim Collins until past halfway before his giant strides made the difference.

"I looked really bad. I was at the back of the pack," he said. "I lost focus for a few seconds."

Brussels gives him one more chance to correct that before he heads into a monthlong holiday. Then the 2012 London Olympics will be on his mind.

"I am going to get better next season," Bolt said of his start. "It is going to be fine."

Because of his height, Bolt will never be the fastest starter, but he realizes there is room for improvement.

"Definitely over the 100 meters: the first 30, 40 is always ... get stronger, run straight, not look around," he said.

And get going as quickly as possible once the starting gun sounds. Not before.

 

Advertisement
  +

Recent Comments

Latest Blogs

Blogging the Rambler
Would a real fiscal conservative have bought that...
By: Charles Trentelman

Wednesday, May 23, 2012 - 11:54am

The Political Surf
Book on ‘Mormonizing’ of America is Bible-bookstore...
By: Doug Gibson

Monday, May 21, 2012 - 3:22pm

Me, myself... as mommy
Is addiction to Adderall really more appealing than...
By: MeganSanders

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - 12:26am

Why Are You Crying?
Pakistani justice salutes bin Laden
By: Mark Shenefelt

Wednesday, May 23, 2012 - 11:43am

Standard-Examiner Sports Blogs
Tyrone Corbin just loves watching basketball, would...
By: Jim Burton

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - 4:20pm

Latest Tweets