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Monday 6 August 2012

Each man for himself when 'Beast' races Bolt ( Olympics 100m Review )

Each man for himself when 'Beast' races Bolt ( Olympics 100m Review )


All anyone's talking about ahead of the men's 100meters is the showdown between Olympic champion Usain Bolt and world champion Yohan Blake, a pair of Jamaicans who train together.
As the blue ribbon athletics event of the London Games gets started with opening heats Saturday, it seems everyone has an opinion about who's going to win - and the answers tend to be Bolt or Blake.
There are, however, other contenders. There's the third Jamaican in the field, Asafa Powell. There's U.S.-record holder Tyson Gay, surgically repaired hip and all. And there even is another past Olympic champion,Justin Gatlin of the US, who walked off the stage in Athens eight years ago with the 100 gold.

But in 2006, Gatlin tested positive for excessive testosterone, leading to a four-year ban that prevented him from defending his title in Beijing.
Now 30, his prime years perhaps in the past, Gatlin has picked up his career. And he still believes he has a chance of reclaiming his crown, even if he readily admits it's a remote one.
"There are other guys out there who have the upper hand on me since I've been gone for four years," said Gatlin, who won the 100 at the US trials in June. "It's going to be an uphill fight for me to claw to the top."
Just as tough has been enduring all the negative talk, the gist of which is: Once a doper, always a doper.
He knows he can't change that perception.
He's stopped trying.
"Look, I've turned the page, but it's a part of my book," he said. "I can never close the door on the past four years and say never I'll never look at it, because that's where a lot of my strengths have come from and a lot of my bravery."
During his ban from the sport, Gatlin found himself relying on unemployment checks to make ends meet.
"Going through the struggle I went through not only humbled me in my lifestyle but strengthened me as a person," he said. "I was able to turn into a man and understand what it is to not know where your income comes from. Because everything just pretty much imploded."
Steadily, he's picking up the pieces.
He's also regaining the form that made him an Olympic champion. He's shed weight, dropping about nine kilograms (20 pounds) over the last year to get down to a little more than 81 kilograms (180 pounds), and changed coaches, switching to Dennis Mitchell.
"I remember reading a blog site, where one blogger said I looked like a professional wrestler on the track," Gatlin said. "I was that big."
The challenge now for Gatlin - and for everyone else in the race - is finding a way to get past Bolt, whose height helps him get to the finish line with fewer steps.

"He's going to cover more ground," Gatlin said. "So you're going to have to compensate somewhere else, being with strength or turnover. But Tyson beat him (in 2010), so that gives a lot of other runners, who are brave to go out there, confidence."
Much more recently, Blake beat Bolt, too, at the Jamaican trials.
"I don't really want to say he's vulnerable," Gay said. "He's the only guy who's been where we haven't been. I think he still has to be one of the favorites. He's the champion and knows what it takes to compete on this level."
He certainly does.
Bolt, after all, won the 100 and 200 at the Beijing Olympics, both in record time. He still owns both sprints' marks, including 9.58 he ran in the 100 at the 2009 world championships.
Not everyone likes his chances in London, though.
Maurice Greene, the 2000 Olympic champion in the 100, thinks Blake is simply too strong right now.
"Technically, he's better," Greene said. "You win and lose through your technique, and Usain has been having technical problems for the last two years. He hasn't fixed it since then. ... I don't see him fixing it now. You have to go with (Blake)."
Gatlin, meanwhile, could be in the mix for a medal.
At least that's how he pictures things.
"You always see these epic photos or short clips, where the whole stadium is dark and dim and then it goes really quiet," Gatlin said. "You see eight guys in the starting blocks, (the gun goes off), and the stadium lights up like a night's sky with photography. ... It's so special. I'm so glad I get to be a part of this now.


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