KARIBUNI

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Monday, 6 August 2012


Bolt celebrates at 3am with beauties in the Olympic Village as Jamaica goes mad for their 100m hero
Usain Bolt celebrated his 100m victory back in the Olympic Village as as Jamaica went mad for his heroics.
After winning the Olympic title for a second time in a phenomenal time of 9.63 seconds, Bolt headed back to his room to celebrate.
Around 3am, he posted a picture o  Twitter with three beautiful girls with the words: 'A gaza we say hmmm mmm'
Sign of the times: Usain Bolt with the three women after his 100m triumph on Sunday night
Sign of the times: Usain Bolt with the three women after his 100m triumph on Sunday night

Bolt will have to keep his focus on the track as he returns to the Olympic Stadium on Tuesday for the first round of the 200 metres.
The Jamaican star is aiming to land the same 100m-200m double he secured in Beijing four years ago but faces competition from countryman Yohan Blake.
Back in his homeland, a tropical storm that drenched parts of the country could not dampen the joy over another record-breaking performance.
As Bolt re-established his claim to the title of world's fastest man at the Games, thousands of his countrymen cheered  him on in an athletics building on the grounds of the national stadium, other public viewing areas and thousands of living rooms as off-and-on gusty winds from the storm swept across the Caribbean country.
Hero: Jamaicans packed into the streets at Half Way Tree in Kingston
Hero: Jamaicans packed into the streets at Half Way Tree in Kingston

Roaring success: Fans cheer at the national stadium as they watch Bolt beat Yohan Blake
Roaring success: Fans cheer at the national stadium as they watch Bolt beat Yohan Blake

A crowd at the national stadium danced and chanted 'Jamaica, Jamaica!', while a group of drummers pounded out a pulsing beat.
Nine-year-old Lois Miller was among a group of dancing, flag-waving children. 'Jamaica No. 1! I knew it! I knew it,' she said breathlessly.
The intermittent rain and wind from Tropical Storm Ernesto forced the country to abandon plans for an outdoor viewing area at the 
Kingston stadium, but spectators managed to watch Bolt's win in the semi-finals less than a minute before a fierce squall swept in and crews had to disassemble the stage and video monitors. 
'Bolt runs, the whole world shakes,' said Patricia Ebanks, a vendor in a jerk chicken stall set up outside the stadium.
At the Halfway Tree square in Kingston, several hundred people gathered at another outdoor viewing area that attracted hundreds of Jamaicans, who stood in a slight drizzle to wave flags and bang kitchen pot lids and blow zuzuvelas. Many mimicked Bolt's famous two-fingered victory pose. 
Jumping for joy: Jamaicans celebrate after watching Bolt storm to victory in London
Jumping for joy: Jamaicans celebrate after watching Bolt storm to victory in London
Up on the big screen: Jamaicans watch the footage being beamed back from across the Atlantic
Up on the big screen: Jamaicans watch the footage being beamed back from across the Atlantic
'Shot down the American dem, shot dem down big time. Lef' dem fi dead,' said triumphant fan Roy Collins, speaking in Jamaican patois.
The Caribbean island is a hothouse for producing sprinters, and for weeks Jamaicans had enthusiastically debated whether Bolt or fellow Jamaican Yohan Blake would claim top honors. 
'It's Bolt all the way for me. He's going to take it all,' Natalie Henningham, an accountant watching at the national stadium, said before the race. Nearby, George Russell shouted: 'No way! Blake!'
The rest of the field, including Americans Tyson Gay, Justin Gatlin and another Jamaican, Asafa Powell, barely got a mention. 
'Bolt all the way! The big man a go defend it! Blake have to settle for silver,' Bernard Wolfe shouted to neighborhood buddies who were rooting for Blake in the Kingston community of Grant's Pen. 
Blake, Bolt's workout partner and blisteringly fast rival, had beaten the Jamaican sensation in the 100- and 200-meter finals during the island's Olympic trials. Bolt's subsequent withdrawal from a meet in Monaco only added to the intrigue and set up the most anticipated story line of the 2012 Games. 
But Bolt, the 6ft 5in sprinter with a long, loping stride, delivered a huge performance again. 
Support: Fans attended the House of Jamaica at the O2 in Greenwich for the race
Support: Fans attended the House of Jamaica at the O2 in Greenwich for the race
Support: Fans attended the House of Jamaica at the O2 in Greenwich for the race
Jamaica was already in a party mood. The country is celebrating the 50th anniversary of independence on Monday. 

On Saturday, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce won back-to-back Olympic titles in the women's 100m, an exciting way to start a historic weekend in Jamaica, which became independent of Britain in 1962.
A one-two by Bolt and Blake was the icing on the cake in Jamaica, a high-spirited tropical island that is known worldwide for its knack for producing ultra-talented musicians and athletes.
Bolt has been the country's biggest living icon since he kicked off his run at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing with a world-record time of 9.69 in the 100m. He earned that record even after he lost time by mugging for the cameras with about 20 meters to go, stretching his arms out with palms up, then pounding his chest.
Bolt went on to win three gold medals and set three world records in that Olympics. The island's prime minster, Portia Simpson Miller, described Sunday's race by Bolt and Blake as 'sheer brilliance.'
Everyone in Jamaica seemed to agree. 'There's nobody can stop us!' said Russell Slater, pointing at the word 'Jamaica' on his yellow T-shirt.


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