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Bolt’s combination of incredible speed, big-race delivery and joyous personality helped ensure athletics maintained its position as the number one sport of the Olympics, with the 100 metres, which the Jamaican won three times alongside three 200m golds, the absolute blue riband event of every Games.
Replacing him as such a crowd and sponsor-pleasing draw was always going to be a tough, possibly impossible, challenge as athletics fights an increasingly difficult battle for TV ratings.
The sport has always had a slightly uncomfortable internal relationship between track and field, with the runners generally hogging the limelight while the throwers, jumpers and vaulters battle for recognition, in every sense.
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Both had magnificent, world-record-breaking seasons and are massive names in their homelands but, partly because of the “second-fiddle” nature of their events, their names remain largely unknown to the general public.
There is a similar challenge with the marathon, where Eliud Kipchoge is undoubtedly at the same level as Bolt in terms of domination of an iconic event.
His breaking of the two-hour barrier, albeit “unofficial”, put him on the front pages in 2019 and the world record holder will certainly be big news when he defends his Olympic title in Sapporo. Yet, the marathon remains something of an event for purists and though Kipchoge is a humble, thoughtful and articulate man, his wider profile remains relatively modest.
There is no getting away from the fact that sprints remain the biggest draw and World Athletics and the International Olympic Committee must have been rubbing their hands together in glee at the emergence of Sha’Carri Richardson.
Flamboyant, confident, outspoken on social media and hugely talented, the 21-year-old American blew through the sport this year in a whirlwind of blue hair and nails and looked set to be the focus of a thousand camera lenses in Tokyo, only to incur a ban for smoking marijuana during the U.S. trials last month.
Also watching from home in the States will be the reigning 100m world champion Christian Coleman, banned for 18 months after missing three drugs tests.
Good news
The good news for the TV companies and their potential audiences is that there will still be plenty of other great athletes on the start line in Tokyo.
Trayvon Bromell looks a hot favourite to take the 100 metres title back to America for the first time since 2004, while compatriot Noah Lyles is hoping to displace Bolt in the 200m.
On the women’s side, Shelly-Anne Fraser Pryce, who won 100m gold in 2008 and 2012, somehow finds herself favourite to complete a hat-trick at the age of 34 after posting a lifetime best 10.63 seconds last month, a time beaten only by the late Florence Griffiths Joyner.
American Allyson Felix goes in the 400m seeking a 10th Olympic medal – and seventh gold – as she appears in her fifth Games at the age of 35.
Norway’s Karsten Warholm runs every 400m hurdles race as if he is trying to break the world record and last month he finally did. In the women’s event, Sydney McLaughlin also set a world record last month and her duel with compatriot Dalilah Muhammad, whose record she took, could be one of the Tokyo highlights.
It is a similar situation in the women’s 10,000 metres, where Letesenbet Gidey of Ethiopia and Dutchwoman Sifan Hassan both broke the world record within three days of each other in June.
Ethiopia-born Hassan is contemplating a seemingly crazy “Tokyo Triple” of 10,000m, 5,000m and 1,500m, an achievement that would earn her a place at the all-time top table of Olympic athletics, where Bolt would, no doubt graciously, shuffle over to make room.
Reuters