Bolt wants roof over his head for Polish race
Jamaican Olympic gold medallist Usain Bolt (C) leaps ahead of the U.S. sprinter Wallace Spearmon (L) and Brazilian athlete Jefferson Lucindo during the ‘Mano a Mano’ men's 100 metres challenge on Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro , last Sunday.
Jamaican Olympic gold medallist Usain Bolt (C) leaps ahead of the U.S. sprinter Wallace Spearmon (L) and Brazilian athlete Jefferson Lucindo during the ‘Mano a Mano’ men's 100 metres challenge on Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro , last Sunday.

WARSAW, Poland (Reuters) – Six-time Olympic champion Usain Bolt is hoping the roof will be closed when he runs his first-ever race in Poland at the Kamila Skolimowska Memorial in Warsaw on Saturday.

The Jamaican world record holder will have his eyes on a special mark when he competes over 100 metres on a newly laid track at Warsaw’s National Stadium, which has a retractable roof.
“I’ve never run indoors, I was always too tall,” Bolt joked at a news conference yesterday. “When I heard there was going to be a roof, I was looking forward to that.”
If the roof is closed, the competition would count as an indoor event, a novelty itself for Bolt, but the new surface could call into question the legitimacy of any times set.
The towering Bolt, however, said, perhaps with his tongue placed firmly in his cheek, he is looking to challenge Namibian Frankie Fredericks’s unofficial indoor world record of 10.05 seconds set in 1996.
“If they treat it as an indoor world record it’ll be good for me,” said Bolt, who holds both 100 and 200m outdoor world records. “It’s always good to have more records.”
Even if it is unofficial.
Bolt has recently spoken of his plans to retire from athletics after the 2017 World Championships in London, where he won three Olympic gold medals two years ago.
As an avid Manchester United fan, who frequently attends the English Premier League club’s games and has even trained with the team, he has plans to try his hand at professional football once he leaves the track.
“I always watch football games and see a few players, and I won’t say any names, but I could do much better,” he said. “So I want to try and see if I really could do it. Hopefully I get a chance.”

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