Usain Bolt Mother's Says her son will soon settled down...
If
the world's fastest man is focused on coming away from the Olympic
Games with an unprecedented "Triple-Triple" of gold medals, Usain Bolt's
mother also has an eye on the future.
"I
would hope he'll settle down, get married and start his family,"
Jennifer Bolt told CNN's Don Riddell as she talked about the hopes she
has for her son once he stops competing.
"I
know he'll settle down because he has said it," she added ahead of Bolt
running in the 100 meters over the weekend at Rio's Olympic Stadium.
"He told me many times that he's going to start his family."
'Lightning Bolt'
Not many sports stars transcend their discipline, but Bolt has -- and then some.
His
golden success at the Beijing and London Olympics as well as his
trademark "Lightning Bolt" salute has ensured the sprinter is as
recognizable and as marketable face as the likes of tennis star Roger Federer as well as footballers Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo.
So just what's it like being mom to the planet's quickest man?
"It's
really, you know, a pleasure knowing that we have the fastest man as
our son because we get to go out, we do lots of interviews, get to go
places," she says. "It's really a pleasure. It's happy and feeling
good."
'Tears of joy'
Bolt
might have estimated annual earnings of $30 million -- he ranks 32nd of
Forbes' list of the world's highest-paid athletes -- but as he has
accrued all those gold medals and the ensuing financial success, a smile
has never disappeared from the sprinter's face.
Perhaps
that shouldn't be a surprise because there's clearly a lot of love in
the Bolt household back in their hometown of Trelawny in Jamaica -- the
sprinter's mom references the word "joy" a number of times in her
interview with CNN.
"Oh I'm so
overwhelmed ... the joy ... sometimes I cry," she says when asked about
the adulation Bolt seems to attract from crowds whenever he runs. "The
tears are coming out within me. It's just tears of joy."
If
Jennifer Bolt has cried tears of joy at her son's power to connect with
people there were times in the formative years of his career when he
cried in experiencing nervousness before big races, notably at the 2002
World Junior Championships in Jamaica -- a scene portrayed in a new film
about his life.
"When I talked with him he stopped crying and I think he thought about it and he said: 'OK mom, I'm going to do my best.'
"I said the Lord is with you and I'm
gonna pray for you and he just goes out there and when I saw the race I
saw him in front and the crowd started to shout his name.
"I think that helped to motivate him because he could hear the stadium, the crowd in the stadium shouting."
Fast
forward to 2016 and as Bolt, who turn 30 on the final day of
competition at the Games, bids to win the 100m, 200m and the 4x100m
relay title at three consecutive Olympics, there's another thing on the
sprinter's mind, according to his 54-year-old mom.
"He's
trying to get everyone to love because he has grown close to us and yet
he has gotten a lot of love. So he's like to share some of that joy
with others."
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