Usain Bolt could not lose – the 35,000 dancing, roaring,
horn-blowing worshippers inside Kingston’s National Stadium would never
have allowed it.
Not after the build-up. Not after an ordained minister led a prayer in his honour; not after a procession of dignitaries paid tribute to “the most famous Jamaican of all time”; not after his every gold medal-winning moment was greeted with deafening cheers as they were relived on the big screens; not after he was introduced to the crowd from an open-top car, before walking through a ceremonial brass band onto a red carpet that had been laid on the finishing straight for his feet only; and not after he had departed for his warm-up to the sound of Frank Sinatra’s My Way.
Not that the crowd cared the slightest bit. Bolt’s victory in a pedestrian 10.03sec, after one of his trademark slow starts, was greeted with unbridled, chaotic joy. Fireworks erupted, the blare of horns was relentless and the party began as a stream of dancehall stars took to the field. It was sheer euphoria.
Not after the build-up. Not after an ordained minister led a prayer in his honour; not after a procession of dignitaries paid tribute to “the most famous Jamaican of all time”; not after his every gold medal-winning moment was greeted with deafening cheers as they were relived on the big screens; not after he was introduced to the crowd from an open-top car, before walking through a ceremonial brass band onto a red carpet that had been laid on the finishing straight for his feet only; and not after he had departed for his warm-up to the sound of Frank Sinatra’s My Way.
No, there was no way
Bolt could lose. And he did not. Jamaica’s favourite son said farewell
in his last ever race on home soil with yet another victory on Saturday
night June 10,2017
In
honesty, the task was not a difficult one. Some significant massaging
of the Racers Grand Prix entry lists had left Bolt facing a host of
faded Jamaican sprinting talent in the “Salute To A Legend” 100m race,
while the fastest men competing in Kingston – his training partner Yohan
Blake and South Africa’s Akani Simbine – were left to their own private
battle in the international 100m.
Not that the crowd cared the slightest bit. Bolt’s victory in a pedestrian 10.03sec, after one of his trademark slow starts, was greeted with unbridled, chaotic joy. Fireworks erupted, the blare of horns was relentless and the party began as a stream of dancehall stars took to the field. It was sheer euphoria.
“The run, it was just OK. I must say it was OK,” said Bolt, as he was mobbed in the aftermath.
“I don't think I’ve ever been that nervous running a 100m. Just the atmosphere and the people, the support they came out and gave me, it was really nerve-racking.
“I never expected this. It’s big to see everybody that turned out. It was my honour to put the sport of track and field at the top.”
The atmosphere inside the sold-out stadium had been electric all evening with fans cramming in five hours before the headline event. Grandstand tickets had disappeared within a day of going on sale and Bolt had joked about being forced to turn his phone off to halt the incessant flow of people asking for freebies.
Every man, woman and child in Kingston wanted to be there to pay tribute to the eight-time Olympic champion – to say thank you and goodbye before he retires after the London World Championships in August.
“I don't think I’ve ever been that nervous running a 100m. Just the atmosphere and the people, the support they came out and gave me, it was really nerve-racking.
“I never expected this. It’s big to see everybody that turned out. It was my honour to put the sport of track and field at the top.”
The atmosphere inside the sold-out stadium had been electric all evening with fans cramming in five hours before the headline event. Grandstand tickets had disappeared within a day of going on sale and Bolt had joked about being forced to turn his phone off to halt the incessant flow of people asking for freebies.
Every man, woman and child in Kingston wanted to be there to pay tribute to the eight-time Olympic champion – to say thank you and goodbye before he retires after the London World Championships in August.
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