Jamaica Bolt to record, magic night for Mo

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Usain Bolt’s Jamaica smashed the 4x100m world record and Britain’s Mo Farah clinched a magical distance double in a rousing climax to London Olympics track action on Saturday.
Sprint legend Bolt anchored Jamaica’s 36.84sec around the Olympic Stadium, which lowered their own mark set last year and pushed him out to a unique “double treble”: the 100m, 200m and 4x100m titles, twice in a row. Aided by Nesta Carter, Michael Frater and Yohan Blake, it put the seal on a glorious Games for the party-loving, 1.96m (six foot five) Bolt, who dominated the 100m and 200m without setting a new record.
“For me it’s just great that we closed the show on a bang, that is what it meant to me,” said Bolt. “I knew we could do it (world record) because the guys came out here, they were very hyped, they were ready, they were focused.” He celebrated by putting his fingers to his head in a copy of Farah’s “Mo-bot” celebration — a salute to the Somali-born Briton, who had electrified the crowd with his 5,000m win.
In a gripping race, swept along by a wave of noise at Olympic Stadium, Farah moved from the back of the field to the front and determinedly held off first Thomas Longosiwa and then Dejen Gebremeskel for victory.
Farah kissed the track and did sit-ups after the win, which after his 10,000m victory places him in the same category of distance greats as Emil Zatopek and Kenenisa Bekele.
“I got great support from the crowd,” said Farah, whose wife is soon to give birth to twin girls. “It means a lot to me and those two medals are obviously for my two girls who are coming. I didn’t want to leave one out — there’s twins so it’s one for each.”
With Olympic Stadium now shuttered until Sunday’s closing ceremony, and 15 titles available on the final day, the United States have a healthy lead on the medals table of 44 golds to China’s 38. Third-placed Britain have 28. The United States’ flying women also had a huge win in the 4x400m relay — a day after shattering the 4x100m world record — and Russia’s world champion Mariya Savinova held off South Africa’s Caster Semenya in the 800m.
DeeDee Trotter, Allyson Felix, Francena McCorory and Sanya Richards-Ross brought home America’s fifth straight victory in the relay, and a fourth win for their women’s runners in London.