Bolt could crack long jump world record, says Powell

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Usain Bolt of Jamaica celebrates as he points to the scoreboard after winning the men's 200 meters final during the world athletics championships at the Olympic stadium in Berlin, August 20, 2009. Bolt set a world record of 19.19 seconds in the race. REUTERS/Michael Dalder

Usain Bolt of Jamaica celebrates as he points to the scoreboard after winning the men's 200 meters final during the world athletics championships at the Olympic stadium in Berlin, August 20, 2009. Bolt set a world record of 19.19 seconds in the race.

Credit: Reuters/Michael Dalder

BERLIN | Fri Aug 21, 2009 5:36pm EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - Jamaican Usain Bolt, whose dazzling sprints have seen him demolish the 100 and 200 meters world records at the world championships could jump nine meters, long jump world record holder Mike Powell said Friday.

Powell, whose world record of 8.95 meters has been standing since the 1991 world championships, said Bolt should try out long jump, a perfect fit for his speed and height.

"I can show him how to jump nine meters, for a small fee," he said with a grin.

"With his height (1.95m) he is the type who would scare me (as a long jumper) ... he is tall and fast. You cannot put into words how great an athlete he is."

Bolt is the only sprinter ever to hold the world and Olympic 100 and 200 titles as well as the world records over both distances simultaneously.

"We are dealing with a freak-of-nature athlete. He is off the charts," Powell said. "He goes to another level ... his pure athleticism is unbearable. He is destroying other athletes, making them look like kids."

Powell's own record is among the longest in athletics with the previous record stretching back to Bob Beamon at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics.

"Usain is at a level no one has been," said Powell, who said long jump needed an athlete who would captivate audiences.

"When I competed I considered myself as an entertainer," said the American, twice an Olympic silver medalist and twice a world champion, who had a well-publicized rivalry with Carl Lewis.

"(Bolt) knows that everyone in the stadium is coming to see him. He knows he is special."

Lewis is proof that sprinters make good jumpers, having won Olympic golds in the 100, 200 and 4x100 relays as well the long jump.

(Editing by Sonia Oxley

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