Bolt does it again amid high drama

Bolt does it again amid high drama
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TRADEMARK: Jamaica's Usain Bolt celebrates after he won the men's 100m final. (AFP)
Bolt does it again amid high drama
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FASTEST MEN ON EARTH: From left: Jamaica's Yohan Blake, Ivory Coast's Ben Youssef Meite, Canada's Andre De Grasse, Jamaica's Usain Bolt, France's Jimmy Vicaut, USA's Justin Gatlin, South Africa's Akani Simbine and USA's Trayvon Bromell compete in the men's 100m final during the athletics event at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on Sunday. (AFP)
Bolt does it again amid high drama
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GREAT SHOW: South Africa's Wayde van Niekerk reacts as he crosses the finish line to break the world record in the men's 400m final on Sunday. (AFP)
Bolt does it again amid high drama
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GOLDEN JUMP: Gold medalist Colombia's Caterine Ibarguen celebrates winning the women's triple jump final on Sunday. (AFP)
Updated 15 August 2016
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Bolt does it again amid high drama

Bolt does it again amid high drama

RIO DE JANEIRO: Usain Bolt stormed to an unprecedented third straight Olympic 100m title as Wayde van Niekerk smashed Michael Johnson’s long-standing 400m record in Rio on Sunday.
On a night of high drama Sunday, Bolt galloped past drug-tainted US rival Justin Gatlin to cross in 9.81sec and become the first athlete to win the 100m three times in a row.
The victory set the Jamaican showman off on his quest to complete the ‘triple triple’ — 100m, 200m and 4x100m gold medals at three consecutive Olympics.
“Somebody said I can become immortal. Two more medals to go and I can sign off. Immortal,” said Bolt.
Minutes earlier, jaws dropped as van Niekerk timed a lightning 43.03sec in the 400m, breaking Johnson’s 17-year-old record set in 1999.
“I have never seen anything like that,” Johnson told the BBC. “That was a massacre by Van Niekerk. This young man has done something truly special.”
The fireworks came after an emotional Andy Murray won his second straight men’s singles tennis gold as Britain reeled in five gold medals in one day. Fellow America’s Simone Biles stayed on track for a record five gymnastics gold medals at a single Olympics when she clocked up her third, on the balance beam.
And fears over Rio de Janeiro’s fragile security rose after Ryan Lochte and three fellow US swimmers were robbed at gunpoint by criminals posing as police.
Although way short of his 9.58sec world record, Bolt was happy with the performance but admitted he had been “shocked” at booing from the crowd directed at Gatlin, who has twice been banned for doping.
He started slowly but reeled in Gatlin within 70 meters and eased up, thumping his chest as he crossed the line. Canada’s Andre de Grasse took bronze.
“I didn’t go so fast but I’m so happy I won,” he said.
Kenya’s Jemima Sumgong won the first athletics gold of the day, making light of searing heat to triumph in the women’s marathon.
Colombia’s world champion Caterine Ibarguen won the women’s triple jump with a leap of 15.17m.
Adding to Britain’s Sunday Olympic medal surge was Max Whitlock who won the men’s floor exercise to become Britain’s first Olympic gymnastics champion. He won a second gold in the pommel horse.
The golden Sunday for the Brits put them a surprise second on the medals table with 15 victories, behind the United States on 26.
Rio Games security has proved a major headache for organizers, with several teams complaining of thefts and street crime in the recession-hit metropolis.
The latest to fall victim was US swimmer Lochte and three teammates, who said they were robbed at gunpoint by criminals who pulled over their taxi posing as police.
“The guy pulled out his gun, he cocked it, put it to my forehead and he said, ‘Get down,’ and I put my hands up, I was like, ‘Whatever,’” Lochte told NBC News.
“He took our money, he took my wallet — he left my cell phone, he left my credentials.”