Andre De Grasse 'booted out' of 100-m showdown against Bolt

Andre De Grasse, hoping for the chance to beat Usain Bolt for the first time at Friday's Diamond League meet in Monaco (CBCSports.ca, 2 p.m. ET), will have to wait until the upcoming world championships in London, England, as the sprinters will be competing in separate events.

Olympic champ from Jamaica wanted non-elite field before worlds, says Canadian sprinter's coach

Sprinters Andre De Grasse, left, and Usain Bolt, right, will have to wait two weeks at the world championships to share the track. The Canadian will run the 4x100-metre relay at Sunday’s Diamond League meet in Monaco, while Bolt said he preferred a non-elite field in the 100, according to De Grasse’s coach, Stuart McMillan. (Julian Finney/Getty Images/File)

Canadians anxious for a world championships preview pitting an improved Andre De Grasse and world-record holder Usain Bolt in the 100 metres at Monaco on Friday will be disappointed.

De Grasse and Bolt will be at the final Diamond League meet before worlds, which will be streamed by CBCSports.ca at 2 p.m. ET, but they'll be competing in separate events — De Grasse in the 4x100-metre relay and Bolt in the 100 at Louis II Stadium — for the first time since 2011.

"We were in the [100] race. We got booted out. That's all on Bolt," De Grasse's coach Stuart McMillan told CBC Sports recently. "Let's just say he wanted not such an elite field against him."

McMillan told The Canadian Press on Wednesday he doesn't blame Bolt for choosing the field, saying "This is his last year, he's only raced twice. I totally understand that he doesn't want to increase the pressure prior to worlds by going in with a potential loss."

InstaCreep: Did Usain Bolt bump Andre De Grasse out of a Diamond League race?

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This week: Drama! Well... kind of. Despite talks that he bumped Andre De Grasse out of the upcoming Diamond League 100-metre sprint, Usain Bolt's Instagram suggests he's unfazed.

Bolt's management team told British newspaper the Telegraph it didn't have a role in De Grasse's exclusion from the race or in forming the field.

CBC reached out for comment from the IAAF amd the Monaco meet director, but has not yet heard back.

South Africa's Akani Simbine, who has run under 10 seconds eight times this season, will face Bolt along with five others, including Britain's Chijindu Ujah, who have run sub-10s in 2017.

Typically in the men's 100, the elite sprinters will have secure graces, or a protection clause, that allows someone like Bolt to control the field in a race "which is a great thing if you're afraid you're going to lose" or unsure how you're going to perform, explained Kris Mychasiw, managing partner of Montreal-based Sprint Management.

Protecting Bolt's brand, value

He added that's why you don't often see American Justin Gatlin line against Bolt or De Grasse, because the winner's value rises and the loser's value plummets.

"Prior to the Monaco event," said Mychasiw, "Bolt might have had a clause in his contract that said he doesn't have to race anyone ranked in the top five or top 10 in the world, and that the field would need to be approved by himself and/or his management company."

Mychasiw noted Bolt's management team is concerned about protecting the sprinter's brand and value entering the world championships.

"No one wants to see Bolt lose this year and I think Andre, right now, is a major threat to that in Monaco," said Mychasiw.

Pole vaulter Shawn Barber, middle-distance runner Melissa Bishop (800) and distance runner Matt Hughes (3,000 steeplechase) will round out the Canadian contingent on Friday.

De Grasse's three medals at last summer's Olympics in Rio de Janeiro — silver behind Bolt in the 200 and bronze behind the Jamaican in the 100 and relay — is the most won by any Canadian sprinter at a single Olympics.


Since then, he has repeatedly expressed a desire to beat Bolt before the 30-year-old retires following the world championships.

"It would mean everything to me. I have been working so hard for it," said De Grasse. "For me to be able to call myself the fastest man in the world, it would be a blessing. I am definitely looking forward to that day."

Bolt, an eight-time Olympic gold medallist, was impressed by De Grasse's showing in Rio.

"He's going to be good. He runs just like me, he's really slow out of the blocks but when he gets going, he gets going," Bolt said after the 200 final in Brazil. "I think he can improve his start, make it better than mine because he is shorter so he will get better on his starts."

Double gold at nationals

The five-foot-eight De Grasse has indeed improved his acceleration out of the starting blocks this season, according to McMillan. Former Olympic 100 champion-turned-CBC Sports analyst Donovan Bailey noted the 23-year-old has also made strides in his speed endurance.

On Sunday, De Grasse finished first and set a meet record of 20.03 seconds in the 200 at Diamond League Rabat in Morocco. That performance came on the heels of his double gold in the 100 and 200 at the Canadian track and field championships earlier this month in Ottawa.

De Grasse raised eyebrows a month ago when he ran a wind-aided 9.69 in the 100 in Stockholm — 9.88 with no wind, according to estimated wind-altitude adjustment calculators — and has prevailed in four consecutive Diamond League races, capturing the 200 in Rome and the 100 in Oslo and Sweden.


"One of the things I liked about the fact he ran 9.69 is that his body was capable of going that fast without injuring anything," said Bailey of De Grasse.

"One of the things Stuart will do is prepare him to peak in London. That's where we're going to see his best [time] this year."


Bolt, who ran 9.88 to victory six years ago in Monaco, clocked 9.81 to win the Rio Olympic 100 over Justin Gatlin (9.89) and De Grasse, who ran a personal-best 9.91. Bolt and De Grasse finished 1-2 in the 200 in 19.78 and 20.02, respectively.

Bolt last raced on June 11, his final performance in his native Jamaica, where he looked sluggish but topped the field in 10.03 before 35,000 at Kingston's National Stadium. He then wowed the crowd by showing off his dance moves on a night dubbed Salute To A Legend. Bolt also clocked 10.06 earlier this season in Ostrava, Czech Republic.


According to his manager, Ricky Simms, Bolt will try to add to his 13 world championship medals by running the 100 and 4x100 in London.

Diamond League on CBC Sports

CBC Sports is providing live streaming coverage of all 14 Diamond League meets this season at CBCSports.ca and via the CBC Sports app for iOS and Android devices. TV coverage will be featured as part of the network's Road To The Olympic Games weekend broadcasts throughout the season.

The following is a list of coming Diamond League meets on CBCSports.ca and the CBC Sports app:

  • Monaco (Friday, 2 p.m. ET)
  • Birmingham (Aug. 20, 2 p.m. ET)
  • Zurich (Aug. 24, 3 p.m. ET)
  • Brussels (Sept. 1, 3 p.m. ET)