Mecha_Infantry
Banned
littleorphanfunk said:You do know that testing and making drugs tht don't test positive is a never ending game right?
SO what sense would his original quote of testing his urine be beneficial?
littleorphanfunk said:You do know that testing and making drugs tht don't test positive is a never ending game right?
Luscious LeftFoot said:![]()
:lol Unbelievable, I'd love to know what the other sprinters are thinking at the very moment.
Mecha_Infantry said:Bolt said 400m (his original distance) and long jump are going to be events he is training for in 2012.
I'll get the quote later. At work now
Usain Lightening Bolt said:"I tell my coach I'd love to try the long jump before I retire. Definitely," Bolt said.
"Hopefully I can do this before I retire because I think I'd be very good at it."
Warming up my mouth with some stretching excersizes. Never before have i serviced such a large member.ForzaItalia said:Bolt to race Friday in Zurich and Sep 4th in Brussels. He will also be in Shanghai to race Sep 20th and is considering a Sept. 25 sprint race in Daegu, South Korea, which will host the next world track and field championships in 2011.
More than enough races for Manics to fellate Sir Bolt. :lol
"I definitely want to try the long jump, I think I can be a good long jumper," Bolt said Thursday, on the eve of the Weltklasse Golden League meet in Zurich. "I've messed around with it. I think I'd be good. I think I'd have a good distance, just looking at it."
Although Bolt said he has never measured his leaps, the 23-year-old sprinter who shattered world records in the 100 and 200 meters at the world championships did not put a timetable on his long jumping career.
"Maybe when the races start getting tighter, closer," Bolt said.
While not ruling out that he might compete in the long jump at the 2012 Olympics in London, Bolt cautioned that it was still just his own idea.
"I haven't discussed it with my coach," said Bolt, who added that running the 400 was not in his plans. "I want to try it (the long jump) before I retire."
Powell told Reuters last week he thinks Bolt has a shot of breaking the mark.
"I can show him how to jump nine metres, for a small fee," Powell joked.
Bolt said he was a little tired after Berlin but that he still may have "three good" races in him. He would not speculate about Friday's 100-meter event in Zurich, where he will face off against former world-record holder and Jamaican teammate Asafa Powell, the bronze medallist in Berlin.
Bolt earlier made a public appearance at Zurich's main railway station, stepping out of a black limousine to rapturous applause from about 3,000 flag-waving fans.
Dressed in a dark-blue T-shirt, jeans and white sneakers, Bolt spent about an hour signing autographs before putting in a brief DJ performance for the crowd.
The Jamaican didn't race. That job fell to a life-size cardboard cutout, which sped 50 meters along a rail at Bolt-speed. Attempts by fans to keep up even on a bicycle all failed.
"It was good. I am surprised how many people came," Bolt said. ``The crowds are getting bigger."
"I would say this was a shaky race," Bolt said
Bolt, the world and Olympic champion, trailed Powell halfway into the race then used his huge stride to pull ahead and eased up in the last couple of meters. Powell finished in 9.88, followed by two Americans, Darvis Patton in 9.95 and Michael Rodgers in 9.98.
Bolt did not crush his rivals but still had enough to win ahead of Powell, the former world-record holder.
"My body was sitting at the start," Bolt said. "I was a little bit tired through the race. All things considered, the time is not bad. I needed to pick up my speed as my body did not respond well to the race."
Powell, the bronze medalist in Berlin, said this was proof he could beat Bolt "when everything works out fine for me."
"I have 9.6 in my legs and at my next meet I'm going to put it on the track," Powell said. "Everyone has to go out with that in mind, that they can beat Usain.
"He's way ahead of the crowd right now but we're really playing catch-up. We'll get there somehow. Usain is taking the sport to a whole different level and we are going up there to join him."
Bolt had enough in him to later lead Jamaica to victory in the 400 relay. Bolt had a lot of ground to make up but overtook Wallace Spearmon, the U.S. anchor runner. Jamaica clocked 37.70 and the Americans 37.73.
NightHawk17 said:any updates on bolt?
Manics said:Well, it's kinda the off season, but since you asked Powell is talking tough and says Bolt can be beaten. He's wrong.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/12/08/2765612.htm
BoltSackLatherer said:The reigning world and Olympic champion over 100 and 200 metres was never tested, finishing in relaxed style ahead of Americans Angelo Taylor, who was second in 20.34 seconds, and Ryan Bailey, third with a time of 20.43 seconds.
STOCKHOLM -- It turns out Usain Bolt can be beaten.
From Beijing to Berlin, it seemed that Bolt and his long, turbocharged strides were more than a match for anyone over 100 meters. But Tyson Gay upset the defending world and Olympic champion Friday in a race between the two fastest runners in history.
Gay beat the Jamaican at the DN Galan meet in 9.84 seconds, competing at the same stadium where Bolt last lost a race two years ago.
The American seemed to be in complete control against the world record-holder. The pair raced side by side in lanes four and five and as Gay, looking comfortable, drew away. Bolt was straining to keep up and finished second in 9.97.
...
LONDON -- Olympic champion Usain Bolt said American sprint rival Tyson Gay "probably just hates my guts" because he has dominated major championships.
Bolt won both the 100 and 200-meter titles at the 2008 Olympics in world-record times, and helped Jamaica win gold and set another world record in the 4x100-meter relay.
A year later, he again set world records in the 100 and 200 at the world championships in Berlin.
"I think Tyson sits at home and cusses me," Bolt told BBC radio Wednesday. "He just really gets upset because every time he runs fast, I run faster than he does. At the world championship he ran 9.71 and that's the fastest a U.S. athlete has ever run and he was still cussing. So deep down I think he probably just hates my guts."
The 24-year-old Bolt hadn't lost an individual race in two years until last month, when Gay beat him in Stockholm in a 100-meter race.
"It's no stress. This year is not a championship year, this is my year off I would say, so it is no problem," Bolt said. "I am always ready, prepared and on top of my game [at the championships]."
Bolt says that he doesn't speak to the 28-year-old Gay away from the track.
"We are cool but we aren't the best of friends," Bolt said.
Manics said:Another race for the ballwashing bank:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYIzFKBIegg&feature=youtube_gdata_player
The USA has been and still is the dominate producer of elite sprinters. Bolt is an anomaly, that rare combination of size, speed, and explosiveness that comes around once every 20 years or so. The thing that gives him a real edge is his stride frequency.I know Jamaica has always been pretty good at track but they've never been this dominate. I honestly wouldn't be surprised if they get hit with a juicing scandal in the near future.
The USA has been and still is the dominate producer of elite sprinters. Bolt is an anomaly, that rare combination of size, speed, and explosiveness that comes around once every 20 years or so. The thing that gives him a real edge is his stride frequency.
from top to bottom:
sprinter 1: fuck him
sprinter 3: fuck him
sprinter 3: fuck him
sprinter 4: fuck him
I'm just saying that since 1898, the USA has been far and away the most dominate producer of medal winning sprinters from the 100 through the 400 meters.Blake was better than any other US sprinter too. Considering the population of both countries, the US should be leading the way.
Who cares about Usain Bolt... in 4 years he will be forgotten like Donavan Baily and Michael Johnson before him.
(09-08-2008, 07:45 PM)
Bolt continues to dominate. Winner of 100M at World Championships. 9.77s.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/athletics/23659064
Not sure Bolt is in 9.6 shape anymore.
He's definitely in 9.6 shape, since he just ran 9.77 into a headwind.