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Usain Bolt seeks more gold as another showdown with Justin Gatlin looms

Luke Phillips

09:54 25/08/2015

Newly-crowned 100m champion Usain Bolt makes a swift return to the track on the fourth day of the World Championships in Beijing when he goes off in round one of his favoured 200m.

Bolt pipped American rival Justin Gatlin by one-hundredth of a second to claim victory in an epic 100m battle on Sunday.

The Jamaican has struggled this season with pelvic joint pain but came roaring back to clock a season’s best of 9.79sec at just the right time.

His focus turned immediately to the 200m, in which he will be seeking a fourth consecutive title after having previously triumphed in Berlin, Daegu and Moscow.

“I should be fine – ice up, chill out and get some rest,” said Bolt, who won the 100m after a heart-stopping stumble in his semi-final. 

“I went to see my coach (Glen Mills) after the semi-final and he told me ‘You’re thinking about it too much’. And he is right because I know exactly what to do. I guess this recipe of confidence will also work for the 200m.

“Justin’s been running great all season. I’m not expecting him to just turn up and not compete because he’s a great competitor.

– VIDEO: Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce reacts to 100m gold
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“It’s my favourite event so something I want even more.”

Gatlin, meanwhile, has vowed to boycott speaking to British media over claims of bias in their reporting of the 100m final. 

Gatlin claims he’s been unfairly cast as a villain to Bolt’s hero and his doping past has been focused on too much.

Middle-distance superstars Genzebe Dibaba and David Rudisha will race the finals of the women’s 1500 and men’s 800m respectively. 

Olympic champion Rudisha, whose win in London was matched by an incredible world record, will be up against it in the two-lap event.

The Kenyan faces a tough challenge in the shape of world leader Amel Tuka of Bosnia-Herzegovina, but was given a reprieve with rival Nijel Amos failing to make the final and world champion Mohammed Aman getting disqualified. 

“It was my dream to get into the final before this championship and now my dream came true,” said Tuka. “My friend Rudisha, he has a lot of energy. (But) anything is possible in the final.”

Ethiopian Dibaba last month shattered the world record which had been held since 1993 by China’s Yunxia Qu, who competed under the guidance of controversial coach Ma Junren, and looks untouchable in the 1,500m.

Dutchwoman Sifan Hassan, Sweden’s Abeba Aregawi, American duo Jenny Simpson and Shannon Rowbury, and Kenyan Faith Kipyegon look set for a battle for lower steps on the podium.

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