Athletics
- World Athletics Championships - London Stadium, London, Britain – August 13,
2017. Usain Bolt of Jamaica applauds fans during a lap of honour. REUTERS/Dylan
Martinez
|
Usain Bolt says he is
serious about starting up a soccer career now he has retired from sprinting --
and believes he could even be good enough to play for Jamaica.
Jamaican
sprinter Usain Bolt plays soccer with Dario Benedetto (R) of Mexico's America
during an event arranged by their sponsors in Mexico City, October 7, 2015.
REUTERS/Edgard Garrido
|
The
31-year-old eight-time Olympic gold medalist, currently recovering from a hamstring
injury, accepted there might be some scepticism but said it had always been his
boyhood dream.
“For
me it’s a personal goal. I don’t care what people really think about it. I‘m
not going to lie to myself. I‘m not going to be stupid,” the Jamaican told
reporters at the U.S. Formula One Grand Prix.
He
was speaking before world champion Lewis Hamilton drove him around the Circuit
of the Americas in a Mercedes AMG sportscar, sending the car sliding into
corners and ending with tyre-smoking spins.
“If
I feel I can’t do it, I‘m going to say ‘you know what, forget this’. I‘m not
trying to embarrass myself. But if I go out there and feel I can do this then I
will give it a try. It’s a dream and another chapter of my life,” said Bolt.
“If
you have a dream that you always wanted to do, why not try and see where it
will go.”
The
world’s fastest man has been sponsored by Puma since he was 15 and the German
sportswear company has a stake in Borussia Dortmund.
Bolt,
who retired from athletics after August’s world championships in London, has
been invited to spend a week training with the Bundesliga club and he plans to
take it up.
“It’s
just my hamstring is keeping me back right now. In two weeks I can start
training again and get back into some shape. Then I can really explore the
situation,” he said.
“They
say the invitation is always open so it’s all about me getting over my injury
and then getting into shape. Then I can do the trials and see what level I‘m
at.”
A
keen Manchester United fan, Bolt doubted manager Jose Mourinho would be on the
phone any time soon but said he had spoken to the club’s former manager Alex
Ferguson about his dream.
“He
said ‘Alright, get into shape and I’ll see where that goes’,” said the
sprinter.
Jamaica,
who failed to qualify for next year’s World Cup finals, are currently 59th in
the world rankings, leaving Bolt to also muse: “I think I can make the Jamaica
team easily. I wouldn’t say they are that good at this point.”
Bolt,
who suffered the injury in his final race, the world championships 4 x 100
meters relay final, again ruled out any athletics comeback, saying he missed
the laughs and banter but not the training and he was intending to start a
family.
“I‘m
waiting to see if my football career will go anywhere but I definitely want to
work with the IAAF in ways to promote the sport and help keep it on the level
on which I left it,” he added. “Being a coach? No. Definitely not.”
Asked
about the current state of athletics and doping scandals that have seen Russian
athletes barred from competition, the Jamaican felt the sport was climbing back
out of the gutter.
“You
have to get to the worst to start rebuilding and I think the Russia situation
was the worst we could get,” he said.
”Now
it’s all about rebuilding and making people trust the sport again. This year
was the first that we made a step in the right direction so, hopefully, we
continue.
“If you’re in the gutter and working your way up, it’s going to take time. That’s what we need. Just time for people to really start trusting the sport again.”
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