Usain Bolt

Usain Bolt

by Mike Rowbottom (Author)

Synopsis

In what is the first book about this phenomenal sprinter, Mike Rowbottom, a widely experienced writer on Summer and Winter Olympics, looks at the way Bolt's prodigious talent has been shaped from his earliest years by a competitive system in his native Jamaica, which has produced generations of world-class sprinters. At the age of 15, Bolt was 6ft 5in tall, and the youngest ever world junior champion, having taken the 200 metres title on home territory in Kingston. His course to the top was set - but it was not to be a smooth ride. This book details how injuries and a lack of mental focus hindered his progress over the next few years until in 2005 Bolt turned to Glen Mills, the man who had coached his idol, Don Quarrie, to Olympic gold. Mills began to fine tune an athlete who was running into technical and physical problems, turning him into the performer who, within three years, was wowing the Bird's Nest Stadium, and a television audience of millions, with his performances at the Beijing Olympics. The Bolt had finally found its mark.
Inevitably in a sport that has had too many high profile doping controversies, Bolt's astounding performances - said by statisticians to be 30 years ahead of their time - have raised suspicions of foul play. Bolt readily acknowledges such concerns, and happily maintains what continuous testing has concluded - that he is running clean. Here is a man whose talent, like others such as David Beckham or Muhammad Ali, has seen him transcend his sport to the point where he is known around the world for being himself.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 190
Publisher: BLACKAMBER BOOKS
Published: 18 Nov 2010

ISBN 10: 1906413827
ISBN 13: 9781906413828

Author Bio
Mike Rowbottom is a freelance journalist who writes widely on sport, and whose current job titles include chief features writer on www.insidethegames.biz. He has covered the last five summer Olympics and four Winter Olympics for The Independent, for whom he wrote a weekly humorous column for seven years. He has also worked for the Daily Mail, The Observer, The Times, The Guardian and the late lamented Sunday Correspondent. He co-authored the autobiography of Olympic 400m silver medalist Roger Black, entitled How Long's The Course?