Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Usain Bolt Returns Gold Medal, Says 'Rules Are Rules' After Doping Sanction

IANS, 03 Feb, 2017 01:29 PM
    Sprint king Usain Bolt insisted that the loss of one of his nine Olympic gold medals because of the doping sanction of relay teammate Nesta Carter won't tarnish his legacy.
     
    "I am disappointed based on losing a medal, but it won't take away from what I have done throughout my career, because I have won my individual events and that's the key thing," Bolt said while attending the opening of a high school gym in Santa Cruz, Jamaica.
     
    Bolt said he had already handed back the 4x100m relay gold from the 2008 Beijing Games, which the International Olympic Committee officially withdrew from Jamaica this week because of Carter's postive drug test.
     
    "I am not fully happy about the situation but rules are rules," Bolt said, noting that Carter and Jamaica's athletics authorities are planning to appeal the sanction.
     
    "We have to sit and see how that works out," he said.
     
    Bolt, Carter, Asafa Powell and Michael Frater were on the Jamaican relay squad that was disqualified after Carter tested positive for the banned substance methylhexaneamine in a re-test of Beijing samples.
     
    All of them surrendered their medals on Friday.
     
    The loss of the relay gold deprives Bolt of one of his "triple triples" -- he won gold in the 100m, 200m and the 4x100m at Beijing and repeated the unprecedented feat in London in 2012 and again in Rio last year.
     
    While conceding that the term "triple-treble" had "a nice ring to it", Bolt said he was looking ahead.
     
    "What can you do?" he said. "I've done all I wanted in the sport, I have really impacted the sport, I've really accomplished a lot so for me, I can't complain," he added.
     
    He emphasized that his priority was to avoid distractions in order to train properly in the coming months.
     
    "This is my last season and I want to go out on a winning note," said Bolt, who is heading for engagements in Australia next week said his immediate plans center on "just training" for competition.
     
    Bolt, who is reportedly willing to contribute to funding of Carter's appeal, said he had not yet spoken to Carter since news of the lost gold medal, but stressed that there was "no bad blood" between them.
     
    "I know it must be very hard, must be rough on him, I know how social media can be and I know how Jamaica is. So hopefully there is some love (being shown towards Carter).
     
    "It's rough, things happen in life for reasons no one knows," he said. "I hope he doesn't take it to heart."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    First selfie dates back 175 years!

    First selfie dates back 175 years!
    In 1839, 30-year-old Robert Cornelius took the world's first self-portrait or selfie at the back of his father's shop in Philadelphia, Mashable reported.....

    First selfie dates back 175 years!

    Beak: a part of male hummingbird weaponry

    Beak: a part of male hummingbird weaponry
    Male hummingbirds use their long and sharp bills to not only probe flowers for nectar but also as a weapon while fighting over a mate, new research says.....

    Beak: a part of male hummingbird weaponry

    The real winners are sometimes the losers

    The real winners are sometimes the losers
    I had a teacher who used to wake us up by shouting: "The early bird gets the worm." Let him have the worm. I hate food that doesn't stay still on your plate....

    The real winners are sometimes the losers

    Spanish love smartphones, Russians love travel apps

    Spanish love smartphones, Russians love travel apps
    This was found in a survey of 2,300 passengers from Europe taken by SITA, an IT and communications company for the airline industry....

    Spanish love smartphones, Russians love travel apps

    Ghosts only exist in our minds, show scientists

    Ghosts only exist in our minds, show scientists
    Patients suffering from neurological or psychiatric conditions have often reported feeling a strange “feeling of a presence” (FoP) phenomenon....

    Ghosts only exist in our minds, show scientists

    How love makes us mean

    How love makes us mean
    A study conducted by the University of Buffalo researchers says that our feelings of love can compel us to do harmful and sometimes violent things...

    How love makes us mean