Usain Bolt (Photo credit: Getty
Images)
(BEIJING,
August 20) -- "I am number one" screamed new 200 meter
world record holder Usain Bolt
into a TV camera lens after leaving the field for dead to
complete an Olympic gold sprint double -- both in world
record times.
You better believe it. Cool, calm
and charismatic in his pre-race preparations, for once here
is an athlete who can live up to the hype once the gun has
been fired. One day short of his 22nd birthday, Bolt
blasted out of his blocks and crossed the finish line 19.30
seconds later to slice two-hundredths of a second off the
previous mark of 19.32. By comparison, the rest of the
world class field left trailing in Bolt's wake looked like
a bunch ungainly dads competing on school sports
day.
For Bolt, it seems, is the real
deal. The Jamaican hasn't so much re-written the record
books in the past five days -- rather he has given
athletics the boost it
needs.
For the remainder of the summer,
children across the world will attempt to emulate this new
ebullient sprint king. With five days to go, it is safe to
say that Beijing 2008 belongs to Usain Bolt. In terms of
numerical superiority, swimmer Michael
Phelps' awesome first week makes him an all-time
Olympic great. And Bolt has some catching up to do to match
the marvelous record of American sprinter
Carl Lewis -- the last man
to complete the Olympic 100m and 200m sprint double.
Let's not forget that for good measure Lewis also won
the Long Jump and the 4 x100 Relay in Los Angeles,
and nine Olympic gold medals in total.
Yet like the greatest of sportsmen
such as Muhammad Ali, Pele or
Magic Johnson, Bolt adds something else -- theater. It
isn't just what he does, it is the way that he does it.
There is joyous confidence that somehow falls this side of
arrogance -- enough to suggest he is capable of
gouging lumps out of his own world records. It will be fun
to watch. And athletics stadiums around the world are
guaranteed to be packed to the rafters to see him
try.
Frankly, it is up to other athletes
to respond -- a hard ask for the night's other track
and field athletes. For the record, Shawn Crawford and
Walter Dix both of the United
States took the silver and bronze medals. Churandy
Martina and Wallace Spearmon were
both disqualified.
So pity the poor, the Women's 400
meters hurdlers who were up next. Another Jamaican won gold
- Melaine Walker in a new Olympic
record time of 52.64 seconds. Sheena Tosta of the
United States ran 53.70 to claim the silver, while Tasha
Danvers of Great Britain took the
bronze in 53.84.
Earlier, Aksana Miankova of
Belarus won the Women's Hammer
Throw gold medal in a new Olympic record of 76.34 meters to
frustrate Athens 2004 silver
medalist Yipsi Moreno of Cuba
who, again, came second with 75.20m, while
China's Wenxiu Zhang threw
a season best of 74.32m to claim bronze.
In evening's other heats,
unsurprisingly Dayron Robles of
Cuba ran the fastest time in the Men's 110m Hurdles
semifinals, while defending champion Veronica Campbell-Brown of Jamaica led home
the first Women's 200m semifinal in 22.19 seconds to
qualify for the final. Kenya's Wilfred Bungei qualified
fastest for the Men's 800m semifinal by running a season
best time of 1:44.90 minutes, while in the Men's 5000m
preliminary round Matthew Tegenkamp of the United States
ran the fastest time ahead of Kenya's Eliud Kipchoge and
Ethiopian brothers, Tariku and
Kenenisa Bekele, the latter going
for the 5000m / 10,000m double, having won the longer race
on August 17.
Off track and over the water – well
10 kilometers' worth to be precise -- the Women's
Swimming Marathon made its
Olympic bow with a predictable outcome, although hardly an
easy race for overwhelming favorite Larisa Ilchenko of
Russia, who touched home first in
a time of 1:59:27.7. It was a close race throughout, and
although Ilchenko broke away from the pack late on, she was
pushed all the way by Great Britain's Keri-Anne Payne,
whose GB compatriot, Cassandra Patten, finished
third.
Much of the pre-race speculation
centered around amazing leg amputee Natalie du Toit of
South Africa, who finished a
creditable 16th in a time of 2:00:49.9, a little over one
minute behind winner, Ilchenko.
Also on water, there were
sensational scenes at Qingdao,
when Athens silver medalist Yin
Jian won China's first ever Olympic
Sailing gold medal by
clinching the Women's RS:X (Windsurfer) title, ahead
of Italy's Alessandra Sensini. The 2008 world
champion, Tom Ashley of
New Zealand, triumphed in
the Men's race.
Chinese sailor Yin Jian (Photo credit: Getty
Images)
Gliding around in water rather more
gracefully, Russian duo Anastasia
Davydova and Anastasia
Ermakova won the first Synchronized Swimming gold medal of Beijing
2008 in the Duet Free final. It was the four-time world
champions' third Olympic gold, having won both the Duet and
Team gold medals in Athens.
Synchro swimmers Anastasia Davydova and
Anastasia Ermakova (Photo credit: Getty
Images)
On sand, second-seed Phil Dalhausser
and Todd Rogers of the United States easily defeated
surprise semifinalists Jorge Terceiro and Renato Gomes of
Georgia to advance to the final of the Men's
Beach Volleyball. They will
meet Brazil's Fabio
Magalhaes and Marcio Araujo, the fourth-seeded pair
who edged out fellow Brazilians and defending
champions, Ricardo Santos
and Emanuel Rego.
Back on terra firma, though barely
on stable land, there was almost a shock on the first ever
day of the Olympic BMX Cycling
competition as three-time world champion Kyle Bennett
dislocated his left shoulder in a crash during heat three
of the quarterfinals at the Laoshan BMX Field. The
28-year-old had enough points, however, and is through to
tomorrow's (August 21) final.
From teeth gritting to gripping and
grappling, Buvaysa Saytiev claimed Russia's fifth
Wrestling gold medal of the Games
by beating Soslan Tigiev of Uzbekistan to take the Men's
Freestyle 74 kilogram crown. By contrast, European champion
Ramazan Shahin won Turkey's first
gold medal of the Games by defeating Andriy Stadnik of
Ukraine in the 66kg weight
category.
China and Mexico were triumphant on the opening day of
Taekwondo competition. World
champion Wu Jingyu of China won the Women's -49kilogram
crown by beating Buttree Puedpong of Thailand in the final, while Mexico's
Guillermo Perez claimed the Men's -58kg gold by defeating
Yulis Gabriel Mercedes of the Dominican
Republic.
The highlights of other teams sports
nearing a conclusion saw the Women's Hockey finalists decided with semifinal wins
for the Netherlands, which
crushed 2008 Champions Trophy winners Argentina 5-2, and China, which stunned
reigning European and Olympic champions Germany to reach its first Olympic Women's
Hockey final.
Tomorrow's (August 21) last-ever
Olympic Women's Softball final
will be contested between the United States and Japan, with
Australia already having secured
the bronze medal via the Page system, where the top two
seeds (the United States and Japan) play each other in the
semifinal, essentially guaranteeing the loser a best-chance
finish of bronze.
Team USA advanced to the semifinals
of the Men's Basketball
tournament by knocking out Australia 116-85, and will meet
Argentina which edged out Greece,
80-78, in the most close-fought game of the quarterfinals.
Spain defeated Croatia 72-59, and will face Lithuania which
comprehensively crushed China 94-68 in the other
semifinal.
The Spanish are also through to the
Men's Handball semifinals after
beating the Republic of Korea
29-24 and now meet Iceland, 32-30
victors over Poland, while
Croatia proved too strong for Denmark, winning 26-24, and will now meet
France, 27-24 winners of their
tie against Russia.
In Men's Water
Polo quarterfinals there were wins for Italy,
Greece, Montenegro and Serbia.
That was Day 12 of Bejing 2008 -- an
evening lit up by a Bolt of lightning pace.