Bolt not the greatest yet

The Olympic 100 and 200 metres champion Usain Bolt is not the greatest ever sprinter just yet according to his coach Glen Mills.

Usain Bolt was sensational in Beijing but there is more to come from the treble champion.
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KINGSTON // The coach of triple Olympic gold medallist Usain Bolt wants his sprinter to win more major events before declaring the Jamaican the world's greatest ever sprinter. Glen Mills, who guided Bolt to victory in the 100 and 200 metres in world record times at this year's Beijing Games, believes his charge has plenty more to prove. "His performance as a sprinter at the Beijing Olympics is the greatest ever in terms of quality," Mills said.

"However, that's one performance. I would like to see him back that up with other outstanding performances before he can be called the world's greatest ever. I want some more from him, because right now it is even difficult to compare other athletes and eras with him." Bolt, 22, is favourite to win the sport's top two annual awards in Monaco on Saturday. After elaborate post-Beijing celebrations which Mills said disrupted his training regime, the lanky sprinter has started training for the 2009 season, highlighted by the world championships in Berlin.

"Training has just started but we are constantly interrupted with his numerous engagements. Hopefully, after Monaco we will be able to sit down and map out something in terms of his training so that we can be competitive," Mills said. Bolt will not be running any 400 metres races in 2009 and will not compete on the indoor circuit because the risk of injuries is too great. Breaking more records is high on Mills's agenda for 2009, although consistency from a man he regards as a son and friend is a more important goal.

Bolt was criticised by Mills for celebrating 25 metres from the end of the 100 metres final, a move Mills believes denied Bolt a time of 9.50 rather than the 9.69 he clocked, the sprinter will receive stricter instructions next year. "We earmark the big events, with the Olympics being number one and the world championship number two in terms of importance," Mills said. Mills puts Bolt's transformation from an athlete who could only manage moderate times and performances until last year down to his training programme.

"He has now developed his talent to the level that he can perform to the potential that he showed in earlier years," Mills said, but the coach is aware that Bolt will face serious competition in 2009. "Every athlete will be gunning for him next year. He will do very well again and I know that because we share a relationship that goes beyond coaching." *Reuters