Jamaica: “Lightning” Strikes Twice at Beijing Olympics

Usain Bolt celebrates after his record-breaking win in the 100m on August 16.
Photo by Kerry Gibbons. Used with permission

Global Voices OlympicsJamaica's Usain Bolt continued his phenomenal run at the Beijing Olympics with a record-breaking win in the men's 200m Wednesday. His 19.30 sec time shaved two-hundredths of a second off American Michael Johnson‘s record made in Atlanta in 1996. In so doing, Bolt became the first man to win both the 100m and 200m at the same Olympics since Carl Lewis‘s feat in 1984. Not to be outdone, the Jamaican women also made the Caribbean proud, with Melanie Walker making a new Olympic record in the women's 400m hurdles.

Among the first to comment on Bolt's win was Trinidadian blogger Sitting at the Coffee Wallah who summed it all up by saying “Jamaica has certainly made these Olympics his own and here in the Caribbean we are all celebrating again tonight, we have the gold and silver in the 200m as well.” She takes issue with all those who've criticised Bolt's exuberant displays of dominance, however, and especially retired Trinidadian Olympic medalist-turned NBC commentator, Ato Boldon, who deemed Bolt's celebrations “too cocky”:

For years we've had to endure the sight of Americans grandstanding, beating their chests, hurling shoes into the stands, even Ato's bare chest as he hauled his running kit down after every race. Honestly, you get used to sportsmen behaving like a**holes when they do something so you overlook it as the emotion of the moment. Bolt, at 21 is pretty self assured, not a bad thing to be if you're the fastest man in the world. And he just set another world record. Folks, if he wants to do his “lightening bolt”, dance, brush his head, so what.

Or, put another way by Trinidadian blogger Nicholas Laughlin in response to a New York Times article on Bolt's win:

To everybody who disapproves of Bolt's “showboating”: when we in the Caribbean want to show the world how strong we are, we don't mobilise armies. We sing (Bob Marley, Jimmy Cliff, the Mighty Sparrow, Rihanna), we write poems (Derek Walcott, St.-John Perse), we paint (Wifredo Lam), we run and swim and score runs and goals (Arthur Wint, Hasely Crawford, Merlene Ottey, Ato Boldon, Asafa Powell, George Bovell, Learie Constantine, Garry Sobers, the Three Ws, Viv Richards, Brian Lara, Dwight Yorke, the entire West Indies cricket team in the 1970s and 80s, the Jamaican football team in 1998, the Trinidad and Tobago football team in 2006, etc etc etc) — and we go like lightning. Our athletes have always punched way, way above their weight, considering the size of our populations and our national economies. And they do it in style.

The man could dance! So let him dance. Today, all of us here dancing with him.

Usain Bolt talks to the press after his record-breaking win in the 100m on August 16.
Photo by Kerry Gibbons. Used with permission

OwenSoft and Stunner's Afflictions‘s described the excitement in Jamaica, with people in the streets and offices crowding around television screens and waving the yellow, black and green flag of their country. YardFlex and Living in Barbados added to the growing catalogue of information on Bolt by naming the dancehall moves he put down after his historic win.

Raw Politics Jamaica Style uses the classic poem by Louise Bennett-CoverlyColonization in Reverse” as a starting point to discuss recent successes of Jamaica and the Caribbean in track and field and the phenomenon of the small axe felling the big tree. By shutting out the Americans, he says “the wily Jamaicans give new meaning to being ‘likkle but (wi) tallahwah!’

Raw Politics‘ post is a belated celebration of Bolt's 100 m win and the achievements of the women's team as well. But even in celebrating the Jamaican men and women, he spared a thought for Asafa Powell, the powerful sprinter who was expected to shine in Beijing too, but who instead lived up to his reputation of being unable to perform in the biggest theatres of sport. He calls Powell a “trailblazer” who paved the way for Bolt and others:

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has aided the process by taking a decisive step in leveling the playing field in some way, it is now up to us to carry the baton all the way to victory. I am confident we will! Powell’s loss poignantly counterpoints Usain’s victory and underlines the twinned paradox of life in Jamrock.

The international media is perplexed by the rampant new sprint champions, but the fact that Jamaica and the Caribbean are on top of the world in athletics is for Bajan Global Report a sign of the times—a diet of ground provisions instead of steroids may well be the Jamaicans’ secret weapon.

23 comments

  • Awesome article. Man it feels good to be Jamaican. Now lets solve the crime problem. Go Bolt!

  • Shay-Canada

    Dance like David dance, you truly deserve to dance, you have made a whole nation proud, its about time us Jamaicans are looked at for something a great as your accomplishment and not for the negativity the media always try to show us up for.
    One Luv

  • wackenhut usa

    proud to be a jamaican, do you thing bolt, dance and make their head hurt them.

  • JACKIE LOPEZ-FLORIDA

    Whatever it takes Mr. Bolt. I do not think it is any mistake that your name is Bolt. You were created for a time as this and for this purpose. God never make any mistake. You are surely a demonstration of his perfection. Thank the Lord for creating you for Jamaica. If we have people and situations as you are demonstrating now – the positive. There will be very little time for crime and violence. Let me know the statistics on crime and violence over the last week and let’s do a comparison. I believe my assumption will prove correct.

    Keep up the reign “Lightning Bolt”.

  • terra perkins

    ‘Go Jamaica’
    Big bout ya

  • Dena Liles

    From the USA: Congratulations! I saw the first race, and sure wasn’t going to miss the 2nd one. He did Jamaica proud! I was not the least upset that an American didn’t win because they weren’t as good as he was. That’s the way it works. Sore losers suck!

  • Dena Liles

    Oh by-the-way, if could run like that and win a gold medal they would have to carry me out of the arena I would party so much.

  • […] the Olympics would be online if bloggers had access to things like footage of Usain Bolt setting not one but TWO world […]

  • Dena Liles

    I saw the second gold for Mr. Bolt, as well. Had to stay awake to see that. The American television coverage quickly hearkened back to Jesse Owens in Munich saying that Bolt would now just have to have the staying power as a contender. But don’t forget Asafa Powell in the 4×1. I was so glad that all of them Powell, Carter, Frater, & Bolt won and broke the world record that went back to 1992.

  • […] was an elated nation a month and a half ago as it celebrated the victories of its Olympic heroes. This week, a stunned nation is in mourning as the headless body of a little girl believed to be […]

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