Jamaican track star Usain Bolt is considering retiring after the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, he said Wednesday.
But any plans for going out to grass at
the age of 30 would come after three more years of domination that might
include a pop at the Commonwealth Games next year and another shot at
bettering his own 200m world record.
Bolt has dominated the competitive world
of sprinting since claiming three gold medals at the 2008 Beijing Games
but hinted ahead of Friday’s season-ending Diamond League meet in
Brussels that Rio would be his third and last.
“After the 2016 Olympics: that seems to
be a good idea, retiring when I’m still on top of my career,” said the
six-time Olympic gold medallist.
“But again, if I want to continue to
dominate on the track I can’t afford an off season, that is a lesson
that I have learned. This wasn’t a perfect season for me. I won but it
was not in a ‘Usain Bolt fashion’.”
‘Usain Bolt fashion’ or not, the
27-year-old Jamaican still claimed a treble gold at last month’s world
championships, taking his world gold medal haul to eight.
“Now that I’m getting a bit older, I know that I have to stay injury free, maintain focus and act responsible,” he said.
Bolt added that any plans for the 2014
season, a year with no global championships, would be taken in October
after he had taken some time off.
“I will prepare for the next season very
well. First, I encouraged my coach (Glen Mills) to turn it down a bit
but he convinced me that that is a bad option,” he said.
“You need to continue working hard, reduce the risk to get injured and not having to pick it up from scratch.”
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