But while athletics contemplates life without its biggest superstar, Anthony Davis will already be working hard to unearth the next young Jamaican sprinter capable of following in Bolt’s blisteringly fast footsteps.
Davis is the director of sport at Kingston’s University of Technology, or UTech, the de facto sprint factory which produced Bolt and virtually every other major Jamaican sprinter of significance.
The modest facility’s alumni reads like a who’s who of Jamaican sprinting, including Bolt, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Asafa Powell, Nesta Carter and Elaine Thompson, the 100m & 200m 2016 Olympic champion.
«Everybody wants to be the next Usain Bolt because he is a superstar,» Davis told AFP.
Jamaica is considered the sprint capital of the world following a decade of dominance at successive Olympics and World Championships, a success which belies the Caribbean nation’s population of just 2.7 million.
Sprinter Tyquendo Tracey attributes Jamaica’s success to national character.
«Most of us are born with sheer determination. It is hard to beat a Jamaican,» Tracey said.
«The determination comes from the high level of competition including high school. We always have this level of competitiveness.»
Editorial