Usain Bolt at Puma event ahead of World Athletics Championships, Tokyo, Sep 11, 2025. REUTERS

‘I would have run way faster!’: Usain Bolt on modern sprint tech

Tokyo: Jamaican sprint legend Usain Bolt believes he could have clocked an astonishing 9.42 seconds in the 100 metres if he had access to today’s advanced carbon-plated “super-spikes.”

Bolt set his iconic 9.58-second world record at the 2009 World Championships in Berlin, breaking his previous best of 9.69 seconds from the 2008 Beijing Olympics. His record has now stood for 16 years, surpassing the 14-year reign of Jim Hines’s 9.95-second mark set at the 1968 Mexico City Games.

Research conducted by Puma — the brand that outfitted Bolt during his career — suggests that with today’s high-tech sprinting shoes, Bolt could have run the 100m in 9.42 seconds. Speaking ahead of the World Championships in Tokyo, Bolt backed the claim, saying, “I fully agree.”

“Someone who continued after I retired was Shelly-Anne Fraser-Pryce, and I saw what she did — she got faster with the spikes,” Bolt said on Thursday. “I probably would have run way faster if I’d continued, and if I knew that spikes would have got to that level, maybe I would have, because it would have been great to compete at that level and run that fast.”

Kishane Thompson lit up the Jamaican championships in June with a blistering 9.75-second run, the fastest 100m time recorded in the past decade, elevating him to sixth on the all-time list. Despite the surge in performances, Bolt is not losing sleep over his long-standing world record.

“I think the talent is there, and those who are coming up will do well, but at this present moment, I don’t think they will be able to break the world record,” Bolt said.

Since Bolt’s retirement in 2017, after amassing six Olympic golds and seven world titles in the 100m and 200m, no Jamaican man has claimed a global sprint title. The last was Bolt himself, completing the 100m and 200m double at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Thompson came within five-thousandths of a second of ending that drought last year, narrowly edged out by Noah Lyles in the Olympic 100m final. Bolt believes the breakthrough could finally come this weekend in Tokyo, with either Thompson or fellow Jamaican Oblique Seville stepping up.

“I think we have a very good chance this year. Kishane and Oblique have really shown this season that they are performing extremely well. I’m looking forward to it. They should be one-two because they’ve proved they are running fast times. It’s just all about execution. I’m happy to go into the stadium and hopefully present the gold medal to one of them,” Bolt said.


With IANS inputs

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