10th Aug 2012 11:42am | By Editor
Usain Bolt has won the London 2012 Olympics 200m final, held onto both his titles and declared himself a legend. But the Jamaican sprinter stirred up controversy by taking a swipe at Carl Lewis over the veteran athlete’s comments about drug testing.
Bolt is riding high on the admiration of the world after becoming the world’s first Olympic athlete to win the 100 and 200 metres at consecutive Olympics. The Jamaican fast man had declared that once a gold medal for last night’s London 2012 final was in the bag would he allow himself to be called a legend.
However International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge has said that Bolt is not a legend and compared the athlete to Carl Lewis, who won a gold medal in four consecutive Olympic Games.
The comments, made yesterday, are likely to enrage Bolt, and perhaps tellingly, the Jamaican sprinter had some harsh words about Lewis, although they were apparently made in relation to another matter.
Victor Conte, the convicted owner of a company that supplied performance-enhancing drugs to the athletes, had claimed that 60% of athletes at London 2012 are probably using drugs.
When Bolt was asked about this claim yesterday he reportedly flew off the handle, bringing Carl Lewis’s 2008 claim that drug-testing programmes in Jamaica are not stringent.
A furious Bolt reacted in anger, calling the American track star a has-been.
"It is really annoying when people on the sideline talk stupid stuff," Bolt said when asked about Conte's claims. "I think a lot of these guys who sit and talk, especially Lewis, no-one really remembers who he is, so he is just looking for attention. That is my opinion."

America's nine-time Olympic gold medalist Carl Lewis just wants attention says to Usain Bolt
The Lewis-shaped chip on Bolt’s shoulder is likely to be exacerbated by Rogge’s comments.
With most of the world happy to award Bolt the “legendary” tag he demands after the celebrity athlete ran the London 2012 200m in 19.32 seconds, four days after defending his 100m title in 9.63, Rogge’s refusal to do so must be galling.
Speaking ahead of last night’s Olympic 200m final, Rogge said: “The career of Usain Bolt has to be judged when the career stops.”
He said that although Bolt is an “icon” he is not yet a legend.
“If you look at the career of Carl Lewis, he had (four) consecutive games with a medal. Let Usain Bolt be free of injury, let him keep his motivation which I think will be the case ... Let him participate in three, four games, and he can be a legend.”
Next round to Bolt...
A judge in South Africa has granted murder suspect Oscar Pistorius permission to travel abroad,...
Michelle Jenneke, the Aussie athlete whose enthusiastic and sexy warm-up routine went viral earlier...
Team GB's head cycling coach Shane Sutton has been hospitalised in a cycling accident just a...
Team GB diver Tom Daley thought the best way to attract attention to his new video sharing account...
Police have arrested a 31-year-old man suspected of Olympic medal theft.
Rower Alex Partridge and hockey player Hannah Macleod both had their medals nicked on a night out in...
A family from Australia paid tribute to their former Olympic triple jump dad during London 2012 by...
Volunteer entertainers from the Olympics and Paralympics cured their ‘post-Olympic blues’ with a...