Bolt, Seeking Gold, Dresses the Part

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By Amy Shipley
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 6, 2008

BEIJING, Aug. 5 -- As much as Jamaican Usain Bolt loves his nation's reggae and dancehall music, you won't find him bobbing to tunes fed through the headphones of his MP3 player before his races.

Bolt wouldn't dare do that. It is, quite simply, against the rules. His coach, Glen Mills, bans the practice.

"I'm not allowed," Bolt said, "because my coach say I have to concentrate."

Bolt, 21, might be the world's fastest man, having set the world record of 9.72 seconds in the 100 meters in a stunning race in late May, but he is not a speedster who can't be reined in. In his first news conference after arriving in Beijing, Bolt donned a gold watch and gold shoes -- and later a circular gold sack that hung around his neck like a gold medal -- and professed the hope of winning a pair of gold medals in the Aug. 13-24 Olympic track and field competition.

He noted, however, that he was only 80 percent certain he would compete in the 100 along with his specialty, the 200. Mills, Bolt insisted, would make the final call.

"My coach hasn't told me exactly," he said. "I'm just guessing, really."

Informed that Mills had, in fact, revealed to reporters last weekend that Bolt would compete in both events, despite his initial concerns about overtaxing his young star, Bolt expressed surprise. After gathering his thoughts, he revised his position about attempting the sprint double that Carl Lewis won at the 1984 Summer Games.

"I guess I'll be doubling," he said. "I thought I was 80 percent sure I was doubling, now I'm 100 percent sure."

Bolt arrived at Tuesday's news conference in an oversize polo shirt, shoes and necklace, all bearing the logo of his shoe sponsor, and lumbered without a hint of a smile to a stage lit by strobe lights. He dropped his lanky, 6-foot-5 frame into a maroon suede chair next to Scottish music star Paolo Nutini -- who has suddenly become a business associate -- looking like a cross between a big kid and a commercial success. Bolt, it soon became clear, is both.

The centerpiece of Puma's Olympic advertising campaign and the gold medal favorite in the 100 and 200, Bolt is just a year removed from being the upstart from Kingston who showed promise in the sprints but couldn't match his more acclaimed countryman Asafa Powell. He couldn't match American Tyson Gay, either, losing to him in the 200 at the world championships in Osaka last August.

But just as the track and field community began murmuring about the anticipated matchup between Powell and Gay in the Beijing Olympics, Bolt pushed both out of the spotlight. On May 31 in New York, he ran faster than both ever had in the 100, an event he said he started running only to avoid the hard workouts associated with the 400.

The 200, he said, has been his preferred race for years, especially since he won the world junior title in the 200 at age 15.


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