Bolt refuses to dwell on the disappointment

Melbourne: Sprint great Usain Bolt is refusing to dwell on the disappointment of losing his Beijing Olympics 4×100 metres gold medal after his Jamaican teammate Nesta Carter tested positive for a banned stimulant.
Bolt, who completed a remarkable ‘treble treble’ of 100m, 200m and 4x100m Olympic titles at the 2016 Rio Games, had his 2008 relay gold stripped last month after Carter’s re-tested sample indicated he had taken methylhexaneamine.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) ordered Carter, who has already said he would appeal the decision to CAS, and teammates Bolt, Asafa Powell and Michael Frater to return their medals.
“Initially (I was) disappointed, of course,” Bolt told reporters at the Melbourne Airport here as he arrived ahead of the Nitro Athletics series. “But in life, things happen. I’m not sad… I’m just waiting to see what’s going to happen. “But I gave up my medal.”
Powell, who served a six-month doping ban for a positive test in 2013, was as phlegmatic as his storied compatriot.
“It’s very unfortunate and we have to look to the future,” Powell said. “We’ve accomplished a lot and we just need to be positive about everything right now. I’m in no position to say what should and should not be (banned). It is what it is. Some things aren’t fair. But then you have to go ahead with life.”

Reuters

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