Each pace a revolution, lapping not just a track, but a planet, kicking off into air and landing, whole continents gobbled up and still twirling beneath the traction of his feet.
Float on: Bolt barely touches the ground when during his sprints
On Thursday night he will attempt to create his masterpiece. Just before nine o’clock Bolt will set out to run a race so powerful, so extraordinary, so unprecedented that in sporting terms it will make the world spin. With each stride Bolt will be tearing a page, a name, an Olympiad, from the history book.
No predecessor, from Walter Tewkesbury, the first gold medallist in Athens in 1896 to Shawn Crawford in the same city in 2004, got to keep that precious gold medal over 200m. After last night’s semi-final, despite recording the fifth-fastest qualifying time, Bolt is now the 6-1 on favourite to do just that.
This is Bolt’s Olympics, every bit as much as in Beijing. When the parochial thrill of the British medal haul has faded, the name that will leap from the page is his. Bolt has redefined his event, and not just through size. Plenty of people are tall, but they cannot run like Bolt.
And his is the hardest event, for the entire world is his rival. Not everybody can afford golf clubs or a sailboat, not every country has access to a velodrome or the technology required to match British cycling; but each free and able-bodied person in the world is at liberty to try to run as fast as he can. Everybody can have a crack at being Usain Bolt. And only one man is.
Centre of attention: Everyone at the Olympic Stadium (above and below) wants a memory of Bolt
Even without a record-breaking time, a place in sport’s pantheon will be assured by gold. The double double has eluded all for one simple reason: in 24 attempts nobody keeps holds of the 200m crown.
Even double domination of the 100m has only occurred once before, when Carl Lewis retained his 1984 gold medal in 1988, in Seoul, a race subsequently discredited by so many positive drugs tests.
Yet if what Bolt did on Sunday was improbable, his aim this evening had previously been considered impossible. Even Lewis could not keep hold of the 200m title, coming second to countryman Joe DeLoach four years later. Tonight, Bolt is intending to go faster, farther than any man has gone before. This is athletic evolution. Given the time he ran on Sunday night, the winner of the first Olympic 100m in 1896, Thomas Burke, would have been 18m in his wake.
Bolt’s feats travel, ricochet like gunshots, bounce from satellites, to every part of the globe. At the Waldensia Primary School in Trelawny, Jamaica on Sunday, the children, their parents and teachers were gathered in front of a television to watch the latest exploits of their most famous ex-pupil. At which point the power failed.
Not his, obviously: theirs. Bolt’s electricity is very much on full current here in London, but the same cannot be said of northern Jamaica, where large swathes missed the sporting highlight of the year.
So what happened? At Waldensia Primary, a small girl also triumphed.
Best foot forward: Bolt is preparing to dazzle the world with another 200m title
Bolt brings happiness, no doubt of that. His great rival Yohan Blake, who recorded the fastest time in the semi-finals, although he almost slowed to the point of madness in the last 20m, tries to match his showmanship, but he is a young man and always looks slightly self-conscious in his posturing. Bolt acts as if born to it.
For a man said to be scared stiff of disqualification through false-start, a fate that befell him at the World Championships last year, he showed little sign of it at the start here, body-popping to the music before settling down in the blocks.
This is an athlete who tweeted a picture of his 3am companions having won the 100m: the Swedish women's handball team. He thinks British footballers — and he is perfectly serious in angling for a trial at Manchester United, by the way — are encouraged to settle down too early. Don’t tell Sir Alex Ferguson.
Now the stage is set. Bolt is the marquee name of these Games, and legitimately, too. There is much to celebrate in his athletic feats, no matter that the sport lends itself to doubt and suspicion. A man wins Olympic gold with his laces undone, teasing the crowd, and people tend to ask questions.
Best foot forward: Bolt is preparing to dazzle the world with another 200m title
Stroll in the park: Bolt made light work of his semi-final, cruising home in the final stages
It had always been thought that if an athlete of his dimensions could achieve the explosive speed of the squat sprinters from the blocks, then his giant steps would take him past the field like no man before. We have been anticipating Bolt for some time; we just haven’t seen his like.
So what we will see at the Olympic Stadium tonight is entirely logical. Bolt is still the slowest starter on the track, as he should be, but once in his rhythm, cannot be caught. That is even truer over 200m than 100, where he has more time to get going.
The longer race was always his favourite, his feats over the shorter distance merely a bonus. The biggest cat on the track, Bolt is the fastest man in the world almost by accident. What happens tonight is by design. You’ll believe a man can fly.
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