Jamaican athlete Usain Bolt is considered the best short-distance coach of the world.
We talked about the reasons why Bolt, who is going to say goodbye to the Spore with the World Athletics Championships in London, the capital of England, is referred to as "living legend". Bolt, another Jamaican athlete, broke Asafa Powell's record in May 2008 at 9.72 seconds. The second coming, Powell's 9.74 second grade was also good for the previous record.
Bolt again reduced the 100-meter world record in Beijing Olympic Games to 9.69 seconds in 2008. In 1912, a US athlete, Donald Lippincott, who ran in Stockholm, won the 100 meter race in 10.6 seconds. For the first time, the period of the race was recorded by the newly established International Federation of Athletics Federations (IAAF).
The first athlete to pull the record to under 10 seconds was Jim Hines in 1968. However, the first record of 10.6 seconds took almost 100 years to develop in exactly 1 second. The name of this success was Usain Bolt again.