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Riveting without Bolt? A Commonwealth Games conundrum

AFP  |  \R Gold Coast 

With retired after almost a decade of freakish dominance, the looks to track and field's support cast to trigger public interest as Australian sport reels from a damaging

The stage had been set for triple Olympic sprint medallist to step out of the Jamaican's giant shadow in the April 8-15 competition in

However, the Canadian, who took bronze and silver behind in the 100 and 200 metres at the 2016 Rio Games, pulled out of the to focus on his fitness after missing last year's world championships with a hamstring

In his absence, -- himself a former world champion -- will look to fill the Bolt-sized hole left by his countryman's retirement by targeting a sprint double.

"has left his legacy for us to carry on and that's what we want to do," Blake told after arriving in

"I don't have a Commonwealth medal. Usain told me 'if you don't win there's going to be a problem.' My body is great, we're ready to go. I want to take over the dominance of the sprinting world."

In the women's competition, expect more fireworks from Jamaican Elaine Thompson, who stormed to a 100-200m sprint double at the Rio

With South Africa's Olympic 400m gold medallist also out after tearing knee ligaments in a celebrity touch match late last year, both the men's 200m and the one-lap race will be missing their biggest drawcards.

But while Bolt's world records of 9.58 seconds in the 100m and 19.19 in the 200m look to be safe, both races could be absorbing battles, contested under the gaze of himself, in as a Games

- Potential threat -


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Englishman Adam Gemili, silver medallist in the 100m at the 2014 in -- the same year he won the European 200m title -- is a potential threat.

Gemili's team-mate Zharnel Hughes will be in the mix after a blistering start to 2018, with South Africa's Akani Simbine also lurking.

Local fans will hope can complete a hat-trick in the women's 100m hurdles and deflect at least some of the attention away from a cheating that has engulfed the Australian team.

The 31-year-old resident and former Olympic champion, who missed the Rio Games with a hamstring problem, will be the hot favourite despite struggling with a sore Achilles in the build-up to the competition.

Elsewhere in the women's competition, Englishwoman is hoping to secure the second leg of a golden treble this year, ahead of in in August.

The 25-year-old finished sixth in Rio and fifth at the 2017 world championships in heptathlon, but went some way to banishing her demons by winning pentathlon gold at last month's world indoor championships.

A first gold would see her finally emerge from the shadow of fellow Briton Jessica Ennis-Hill, who captured gold at the 2012 London and a silver in Rio.

Away from the track, the Kenyan team arrived in apparent turmoil with athletes threatening a Games boycott after a row over alleged unpaid training allowances.

It comes after a turbulent period for the East African country, which was deemed "non-compliant" by the in 2016 after more than 40 athletes failed doping tests in the previous five years.

It has brought several top athletes, including Olympic and world champion Conseslus Kipruto, world 1,500m gold medallist and former world title holder

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 30 2018. 13:50 IST
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