Usain Bolt Starts Training With Australian Football Club

Usain Bolt trained with Central Coast Mariners in Australian football’s A-League.

AP
Football
Published:
Jamaica’s Usain Bolt trains with the Central Coast Mariners soccer team in Newcastle, Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2018. Bolt, who holds the world records for the 100- and 200-meter sprints and is an eight-time Olympic gold medalist, is hoping to impress the coaching staff enough to earn a contract with the Mariners for the 2018-19 season in Australia’s top-flight competition.
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Jamaica’s Usain Bolt trains with the Central Coast Mariners soccer team in Newcastle, Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2018. Bolt, who holds the world records for the 100- and 200-meter sprints and is an eight-time Olympic gold medalist, is hoping to impress the coaching staff enough to earn a contract with the Mariners for the 2018-19 season in Australia’s top-flight competition.
(Photo: AP)

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Star sprinter Usain Bolt says he passed up the chance to trial with clubs in Europe before accepting an offer to trial for a professional contract with the Central Coast Mariners in Australian football's A-League.

Bolt trained with the Mariners for the first time on his 32nd birthday Tuesday, taking part in light passing drills and agility tests in front of a gallery of almost 100 reporters and photographers.

He has pledged to stay with the club for an "indefinite" trial period in the hope of achieving his long-held ambition to play professional football, a year after his retirement from the track.

Jamaica’s Usain Bolt trains with the Central Coast Mariners soccer team in Newcastle, Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2018. Bolt, who holds the world records for the 100- and 200-meter sprints and is an eight-time Olympic gold medalist, is hoping to impress the coaching staff enough to earn a contract with the Mariners for the 2018-19 season in Australia’s top-flight competition.(Photo: AP)

The eight-time Olympic champion has trialed unsuccessfully with clubs in Germany, South Africa and Norway but is optimistic of breaking through with the Mariners, who finished last in the most-recent A-League season.

Mariners head coach Mike Mulvey said he is happy for Bolt stay with the team for a year if that is what he needs to fulfill his ambition.

Bolt said he had specifically targeted the A-League.

"We got offers from teams in Spain, France and stuff like that," Bolt told reporters. "But for me it'd be harder because you have to learn a new language. It wasn't in the top division.

"Australia is somewhere I enjoy coming. This is a start and I'm really appreciative of everything the Mariners have done."

Asked in what position he hoped to play, Bolt said he is "good at center forward but open to playing anywhere on the park."

"I look forward to scoring as many goals as possible and bringing home the trophy," he said. "But I'm just trying to get over the first hurdle now, that's to get a contract."

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