Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce is the fastest woman alive
Jamaica’s top women sprinters at the Tokyo Olympics look capable of dominating the winners’ podium, but Usain Bolt feels the men will struggle to medal. The form books suggests that the American men will battle for the prizes.
Bolt is disappointed with how Jamaican men’s sprinting has developed since he retired and predicts his compatriots will find it tough in Tokyo after his glorious domination of the last three Olympics.
With Bolt leading the way in his own inimitable style, Jamaica won all nine men’s track sprint finals in Beijing, London and Rio — although they later lost their 2008 4x100m gold medals after Nesta Carter failed a dope test.
While Jamaica’s women look very strong going into their Tokyo campaign, triple 100m and 200m Olympic champ Bolt thinks the men will struggle.
“Well, it’s really disappointing to see this,” Bolt said. “I felt like we had a good crop of [male] athletes for the last couple of Olympics, so for me, it really bothers me to know that this is where we are right now, where most of the world is ahead of us.
Yohan Blake is now Jamaica’s standard bearer in the men’s sprints but will need to improve massively on his season-best of 9.95 seconds to even challenge for a medal in the 100m in Tokyo.
Two-time Olympic champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, the fastest woman alive, sped to a 10.71 second win in the women's 100m at Jamaica's national championships.
Rio Olympic 400m bronze medallist Shericka Jackson produced a late burst to take second in 10.82 secs, ahead of reigning Olympic champion Elaine Thompson-Herah with 10.84.
Bolt said: “So going into the men’s, it’s going to be tough ... I’m just disappointed because I think we do have the talent, it’s just to harvest it and people to take the training seriously and get it done.”
Bolt not only inspired Jamaica’s Olympic sweep but also their monopoly of the men’s sprint world titles from 2009 until 2015, his training partner Blake stepping up to claim 100m gold in 2011 when Bolt was disqualified.
Ato Boldon, who won four sprint medals for Trinidad & Tobago at two Olympics, agrees with Bolt. “It’s going to be a little bit of famine now, I know Blake says he’s not leaving Tokyo without a medal but I don’t have Blake medalling,” Boldon, now a TV pundit, remarked.
The Americans have not won the Olympic 100m title since 2004 but national champion Trayvon Brommell leads the world this year with his run of 9.77 seconds.
Boldon said: “At least Jamaica has some prospects on the horizon, but I do not see any medals for Jamaica in the men’s 100, 200 or 400m in Tokyo.”
Only South African Akani Simbine, whose best run this season was 9.84 seconds, looks capable of stopping an American sweep with Ronnie Baker (9.85) and Fred Kerley (9.86) also in electric form.
“I think the Americans are capable of taking two of the three medals in Tokyo,” Boldon added. “I have Ronnie and Trayvon Brommell in the podium in two of those spots.
The American men also look set to dominate the 200m. Noah Lyles, the 2019 world champion, leads the world with 19.74 seconds that won him the US trials last month.
Kenny Bednarek, who has laid down a career-best 19.78, and newly sealed under-20 world record holder Erriyon Knighton with 19.84, will join Lyles in the US team.
Bolt had held that under-20 record since 2004 and singled out Knighton as one of the youngsters to watch in Tokyo and beyond. “The 17-year-old has really impressed me in the US trials, so let’s see in the near future what he will do,” Bolt said.
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