lol @ this fukk shyt
they dnt test bolt regularly/randomly throughout the year. they only test weeks to the event.
and in jamaica i doubt they even test bolt at all. i doubt they test any of their runners at all. look at their dominance and try to explain it. why is this tiny country so dominant?
If Bolt was American half of yall nikkas wouldnt be saying shyt.
Let that boy cook
Someone needs to tell Bolt that Lewis wasnt the first or the only one to question those times.
This isn't an American arrogance thing. This is a man who is universally disliked from sea to shining sea, irregardless of a nation's flag.
They are running tests people like to conveniently ignore it though.
On December 12, 2007, I advised WADA's dikk Pound to routinely send disguised drug testers to Jamaica, and to begin doing so immediately. I had received information about a specific drug supplier - WADA received this person's name, address and phone number - who was allegedly working with elite track athletes. I also explained to Pound the importance of "offseason" testing and that testing at competitions is ineffective. The offseason is when athletes use anabolic steroids in conjunction with intensive weight training and develop the explosive strength base that serves them throughout the competitive season.
I have no evidence of doping by any of the winners of medals in Beijing, but when times begin falling like rain, questions arise, especially when the record-setters are from countries such as Jamaica and other Caribbean nations where there is no independent anti-doping federation. In the women's 100 meters, for instance, four of the eight finalists in the event were from such countries. Jamaican women swept all three Olympic medals: Shelly-Ann Frasier's winning time of 10.78 seconds is blazing fast, and reflects a drop from a best of 11.31 in 2007 to 10.78 in 2008, an improvement of more than five-tenths of a second in a single year and about five meters faster than before.
Jamaica's Usain Bolt won the men's 100-meter gold medal in a shocking world-record time of 9.69, which is almost unbelievable since he shut it down before the finish line. Richard Thompson from Trinidad and Tobango won the silver medal in a personal best time of 9.89. Once again, five out of the eight finalists in the men's 100-meter race were from an area where there is minimal out-of-season testing: five-of-six 100-meter medals were won by athletes from Caribbean countries without independent anti-doping federations.
Bolt?
Bolt is universally loved