Usain Bolt says athletes who dope must âstop or the sport will dieâ as he prepares to race for the final time in his illustrious career.
Bolt, an eight-time Olympic champion and icon of world sport, will retire after this monthâs World Championships.
The Jamaican, 30, will run in the 100m and 4x100m at the Worlds, which begin in London on Friday.
âHopefully athletes will see whatâs going on and what they need to do to help the sport move forward,â he said.
Referring to the McLaren report, which uncovered evidence of a Russian state-sponsored doping programme, he added: âPersonally I think we were at rock bottom. After the scandal on Russia I donât think it gets any worse than that.
âOver the years weâre doing a better job, itâs getting clean and weâre catching up to a lot of athletes. Thereâs an understanding that if you cheat you will get caught. Over time the sport will get better.
âI said a couple of years ago it had to get really bad, when thereâs nowhere else to go but up. Doping is always a bad thing and itâs never pleasant because you put in the hard work and the sport starts going forward and then you have other guys bringing it back, itâs hard.
âItâs going in the right direction so hopefully it will continue in that direction.â
The menâs World 100m final is on Saturday, 5 August, while the menâs 4x100m relay race â which will mark the end of Boltâs career â is on the following Saturday.
Bolt has won 100m, 200m and 4x100m gold at the past three Olympic Games â Beijing 2008, London 2012 and Rio 2016.
However, his unprecedented âtriple tripleâ of nine gold medals was downgraded to eight after Jamaican team-mate Nesta Carter, who was part of the quartet that won the 4x100m in Beijing, tested positive for a banned substance.
Nevertheless, Boltâs exploits remain unprecedented and he also holds the world record in the 100m (9.58 seconds) and 200m (19.19).
Asked if he still believes he is the fastest in the world, the Jamaican replied: âYeah, without a doubt.
âThe last race I ran was a 9.95, so that shows I am going in the right direction. After the two rounds leading up to the 100m final, which always help me, itâs all about who keeps their nerve.
âI have been here many times. I know I am ready.â
Asked in an interview with BBC Sport whether he believes his world records will be broken, he replied: âI hope theyâre not. No athlete would ever wish for that â I want to brag to my kids when theyâre in their 20s: âSee, Iâm still the best!
âThere is no-one around now, in this era, who can do it. No. Maybe in a couple of years, 10 years, but my records are safe for now.â
â Source : BBC
â Agencies
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