Friday, September 11, 2009

Bolt In Thessaloniki.

Salonika, Greece - Jamaican sprint phenomenon Usain Bolt will line up in the 200m during the World Athletics Final here on Saturday and Sunday for what could be his last appearance of a memorable 2009.


Officially, the triple world and Olympic champion and world record holder in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay is scheduled to compete in Shangahi on September 20 and in Daegu, South Korea, five days later.

But as he announced on Thursday that he would not travel to South Korea due to "fatigue", it seems likely that he will also pull out of the Shanghai meet and return to the beaches of his homeland directly from Salonika.
In Greece Bolt will be competing in his ninth 200m competition of the year. His season also featured fifteen 100m, a 150m exhibition race on the streets of Manchester, a number of 4x100m relays, including the World Championship final, and even the 400m in individual and relay form at the very start of the season.

Fatigued or not, Bolt, who has improved his world records in both the 100m (9.58sec) and 200m (19.19), has produced stellar performances on cue whenever needed, even when the conditions were against him.

The Greek public can therefore expect another high-octane performance from the star of last year's Beijing Olympics, whose last performance in the 200m saw him register a time of 19.57 - the fourth quickest in history - despite mild temperatures in Brussels last week.

'Lightning Bolt' will not be the only familiar face on show in Salonika, however, with no less than 28 recently crowned world champions also making the trip.

Ethiopa's Kenenisa Bekele, winner of the 5,000m and 10,000m, America's Sanya Richards (400m) and Russian pole-vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva, who shared one million dollars (700,000 euros) by remaining unbeaten in the Golden League series, will all be looking to swell their bank accounts even further.

World athletics governing body the IAAF has put up $3 million dollars of prize money for the 36 weekend events, with $30,000 dollars going to the winners of each competition and $2,000 dollars to the finalists.

Croatia's Blanka Vlasic will once again attempt to beat Bulgarian Stefka Kostadinova's 1987 world record of 2.09m in the women's high jump, having failed to do so by a centimetre in Zagreb at the end of August.

Isinbayeva is another budding record-breaker, as she seeks to add to the 5.06m mark she set in Zurich on August 28.

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