Bolt once named ‘the only man in the world’ who could beat him in a race
Usain Bolt once told one of his biggest rivals that he was “the only man in the world” who could beat him.
The Jamaican sprinter, who will go down as one of the greatest athletes of all time, still holds the world record for the men’s 100m [9.58 seconds] and 200m [19.19 seconds] sprints, more than 15 years after setting them.
Back in 2009, America’s Tyson Gay ran the 100m in 9.69 seconds, making him the second-fastest man in the world at the time.
But a year previously, Bolt told fellow Jamaican sprinter Asafa Powell that he was “the only man in the world” who could beat him after previously setting the 100m world record on two occasions with times of 9.77 and 9.74 seconds.
Speaking to The Guardian back in 2011, Powell opened up on the conversations he supposedly had with Bolt.
“I think in the entire world I’m the only person that has always scared him [Bolt],” Powell said. “He’s always been telling me that over the years. I get the truth out of him when he drinks a bit. He gets a bit tipsy and he’s like [adopts a slurring voice]: ‘Asafa, you’re the only man in the world I think can beat me.'”
Powell added: “He first told me that in 2008… just before the Olympics. He’d just run 9.72. He said: ‘You’re the only man in the world who I think can beat me.'”
So how did Powell respond to such a compliment? “I was like, in my head: ‘I know that’ but you know I really have a lot of respect for him and he has a lot of respect for me as well,” he said.
“So for him to really come to me and tell me that I was the one who motivated him to start running the 100m and that he respects me a lot – he always tells me that – I have a lot of respect for him.”
Bolt recently opened up on the toughest opponent of his glittering career – and it wasn’t Powell.
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