Usain Bolt offered deal by Australian A-League soccer club
Central Coast Mariners confirm Olympic sprint champ is in negotiations
Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt has been offered a professional football contract by the Central Coast Mariners, the Australian A-League club said on Tuesday.
The 32-year-old Jamaican has been on trial with the Gosford-based club since August as he attempts to make an audacious switch to a second professional sport after one of the most decorated careers in track and field.
"The club can confirm that a contract proposal has been offered by the Central Coast Mariners and negotiations remain ongoing with Usain Bolt and his management regarding his football future," the Mariners said in a statement.
Club manager Mike Mulvey said after the club's season-opening 1-1 draw with Brisbane Roar on Sunday that he knew nothing about any contract, even if he admitted such matters would be well above his "pay grade."
The former Manchester United trainee has said in the past that he thinks it might be until next year that Bolt was fit enough to make a proper call on, and questioned on Sunday whether he could displace any of the club's front three.
Questions will always be asked about whether signing Bolt was more about public relations than footballing prowess and, despite two goals in one pre-season friendly, it is fair to say that his performances for the Mariners have not been overly impressive.
Several former players and coaches, including former Australia boss Ange Postecoglou, have expressed doubts about whether the sprint champion could make the switch.
'Marquee' money not available, says federation
The public relations value of having Bolt as a squad player might prove tempting to a smaller club, however, as Maltese outfit Valletta FC proved last week when they made the Jamaican an offer of a two-year contract that he turned down.
Football Federation Australia (FFA) have made it clear that the "marquee" money that has in the past helped Australian clubs lure the likes of Alessandro Del Piero to the A-League will not be available to sign Bolt.
That means any contract from the Mariners, whose average home crowd last season was just over 7,000, is unlikely to be highly lucrative.
"I understand from the Central Coast Mariners that they have tabled an offer to Usain Bolt's management, which he's currently considering," A-League chief Greg O'Rourke told local radio.
"That offer is much, much less than what they were originally requesting and that's really reflecting that if Usain wants to join that club and become a professional footballer then he needs to follow a journey followed by many other triallists..."
According to Forbes, Bolt was earning upwards of $20 million US a year mostly from endorsements before his retirement from athletics in 2017 and he has made it clear that his football dream is about a lot more than money.
With files from Associated Press