Bolt could have broken my record if he tried: Mike Powell
BY Agencies14 Dec 2017 11:45 PM IST
Agencies14 Dec 2017 11:45 PM IST
Kolkata: Putting Usain Bolt alongside legendary track and field athletes Carl Lewis and Jesse Owens as one of the greatest of all time, long jump world record holder Mike Powell said on Thursday that the Jamaican star would have bettered his 26-year-old mark if he had trained for it.
He doesn't doubt the talent of modern athletes but feels they lack hunger and that is precisely the reason why his world record of 8.95 metres in long jump still stands intact even after 26 years.
"I was competing with the likes of Carl Lewis and many more at the highest level, so I had very high expectations from myself. Jumpers now-a-days are really talented but they don't have the same mentality," said the two-time Olympic silver medallist, who is here as brand ambassador of the 25K Run event slated for December 17.
A nine-metre jump still remains a dream for athletes and the 54-year-old is one among them, who still regrets of losing the hunger after achieving the world record in Tokyo 1991.
"I was really hungry and inspired before I broke the world record. I feel sad that my record is just 8.95. I think it should be at least around 9.10-9.15 to be more comfortable," Powell said.
"I definitely don't think I got the best out of myself. But then I started getting injuries and got older. When you become a world champion and a world record holder then your focus and motivation changes a little bit," he added. Powell, however, hopes his world record would remain untouched.
"If a jumper is doing like 8.50 plus I start to pay my attention and get a bit nervous. I mean records are meant to be broken but I don't want to lose mine. I like to be the world record holder and not the former," he said.
"But one day will come when someone else would also do it. I know one day it will happen. Maybe someone coached by me will go past that."
Powell rated Usain Bolt, Jesse Owens and his fiercest rival Carl Lewis at the top, but feels the Jamaican sprinter could have gone past the 9m mark had he tried. "I think Bolt could have jumped nine had he trained for it," the 1991 World Championship record holder said. Powell's logic is based on elementary physics that the faster you can take off, the further you will be able to jump.
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