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Usain Bolt’s Answer When Asked if Him or Michael Phelps is the Olympic GOAT

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Usain Bolt did not hesitate to reveal who he believed was the greatest Olympian of all time when given a choice between himself and American athlete Michael Phelps.

Bolt is undeniably one of the greatest athletes ever and potentially even the greatest sprinter in history. The Jamaican claimed gold at three different Olympic Games — Beijing 2008, London 2012, and Rio 2016. The now 39-year-old won a hugely impressive total of eight gold medals throughout his Olympic career.

Usain Bolt at the Olympics

Usain Bolt

His first came in Beijing, where he won gold in both the 100m and 200m events before doing the same again four years later in London. It was during the London Games that Bolt joined the Jamaican 4x100m relay team, where he would also claim gold, taking his total to five gold medals across two Olympic Games.

He won his final three gold medals in 2016, participating in the same events and etching his name into the history books as one of the greatest athletes ever. He waved goodbye to his athletics career in 2017, as he retired following the World Championships in London.

Usain Bolt’s Olympics record

Olympics

Event

Medal

2008 Beijing

100m

Gold

2008 Beijing

100m

Gold

2012 London

100m

Gold

2012 London

200m

Gold

2012 London

4x100m relay

Gold

2016 Rio

100m

Gold

2016 Rio

200m

Gold

2016 Rio

4x100m relay

Gold

His incredible career currently sees him placed 17th on the list of all-time gold medal winners — a list which is topped by American swimmer Michael Phelps.

Michael Phelps at the Olympics

Michael Phelps

Throughout an Olympic career spanning 12 years, Phelps competed in a variety of different strokes, both as part of a team and individually. He appeared at five different Olympic Games, making his debut at just 15 years old at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney.

He would also compete at Athens 2004, Beijing 2008, London 2012, and Rio 2016. He won five gold medals and one silver throughout his final appearance in Rio, taking his total to a remarkable 28 medals, including a jaw-dropping 23 gold medals.

Michael Phelps’ Olympic medals

Olympics

Event

Medal

Athens 2004

400 metres Individual Medley

Gold

Athens 2004

4 x 200 metres Freestyle Relay

Gold

Athens 2004

4 x 100 metres Medley Relay

Gold

Athens 2004

4 x 100 metres Freestyle Relay

Bronze

Athens 2004

200 metres Individual Medley

Gold

Athens 2004

200 metres Freestyle

Bronze

Athens 2004

200 metres Butterfly

Gold

Athens 2004

100 metres Butterfly

Gold

Beijing 2008

400 metres Individual Medley

Gold

Beijing 2008

4 x 200 metres Freestyle Relay

Gold

Beijing 2008

4 x 100 metres Medley Relay

Gold

Beijing 2008

4 x 100 metres Freestyle Relay

Gold

Beijing 2008

200 metres Individual Medley

Gold

Beijing 2008

200 metres Freestyle

Gold

Beijing 2008

200 metres Butterfly

Gold

Beijing 2008

100 metres Butterfly

Gold

London 2012

4 x 200 metres Freestyle Relay

Gold

London 2012

4 x 100 metres Medley Relay

Gold

London 2012

4 x 100 metres Freestyle Relay

Silver

London 2012

200 metres Individual Medley

Gold

London 2012

200 metres Butterfly

Silver

London 2012

100 metres Butterfly

Gold

Rio 2016

4 x 200 metres Freestyle Relay

Gold

Rio 2016

4 x 100 metres Medley Relay

Gold

Rio 2016

4 x 100 metres Freestyle Relay

Gold

Rio 2016

200 metres Individual Medley

Gold

Rio 2016

200 metres Butterfly

Gold

Rio 2016

100 metres Butterfly

Silver

While both have had unbelievably successful careers, Bolt believes that his accomplishments make him more decorated than the now-retired American. In an appearance on the Dan Patrick Show following the events of Rio 2016, Bolt was confident that his accomplishments make him the greatest Olympian of all time.

“I would have to go for myself, for sure. It’s just hard work and dedication. It’s what I wanted (to be the fastest man on the planet) so I knew if I wanted it, I had to work for it. I have a great team around me, a great coach that helps me to stay focused, and I just work towards what I want. I’m just always staying on top. When I started I was quick, but I think when I was like 15 or 16 was when I really realised I had a great talent.”

Bolt is still the fastest man on the planet as he still currently holds the world records for both the 100m and 200m sprints. He set these records back in 2009 at the World Athletics Championships in Berlin. He famously ran the 100m sprint in an unbelievable time of 9.58 seconds and ran the 200m in under 20 seconds, clocking a time of 19.19 seconds.

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Why He Kept 3rd Position at British GP Despite Yellow Flag

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The FIA has explained its reasoning for not giving Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton a second penalty for a yellow-flag investigation at Sunday’s record-breaking British Grand Prix at Silverstone.

The seven-time world champion claimed third place on track as the race — which attracted the largest overall weekend crowd of any F1 event in history — finished in controversial circumstances under the safety car.

The crowd booed the finish — and some were seen to be leaving early — as they had been robbed of the chance to see Hamilton attack Mercedes’ George Russell, with the former on a new set of tyres and the latter on worn mediums.

Why Hamilton Could Have Faced a Second Penalty at Silverstone

Lewis Hamilton

Hamilton risked potentially incurring a second time penalty of the race as he was the subject of a yellow-flag investigation for failing to slow under single-waved yellow flags. Stewards, however, decided against giving him a penalty after hearing from the driver himself, the team representative and reviewing marshaling system data, video, timing, telemetry and in-car video evidence.

The Stevenage-born driver got his first penalty for a false start.

“The evidence showed that there was no yellow light panel warning within the driver’s immediate field of vision and that the yellow indication on the steering wheel display remained visible for only a very short period. The stewards were therefore satisfied that the time available for the driver to react to the yellow flag indication was very limited,” the FIA statement read.

Lewis Hamilton Expected to Receive Penalty After the Race

After the race, Hamilton had told reporters he was expecting a second penalty, but ultimately it wasn’t forthcoming.

“I’m probably going to get a penalty. The FIA often have to react… I went through a yellow flag and didn’t see it,” he said. “So, a jump start, yellow flag infringement. When it rains, it pours. I’ve just been to see them but don’t have an answer. But I will probably get a penalty, I’m sure.”

The FIA confirmed that Hamilton received a reprimand and therefore kept his place in the order and his podium finish.

Hamilton currently sits third in the drivers’ world championship and has closed the gap on leader Kimi Antonelli to 32 points after the Italian teenager finished the race in 16th after encountering technical issues, complaining that something was wrong with the steering.

The 2026 British F1 Grand Prix attracted 564,000 people across the whole event and 175,000 people on Sunday alone.

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Donald Trump Makes Harry Kane Feelings Clear During Mexico 2-3 England

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England produced one of their best ever results at a World Cup tournament in the early hours of Monday morning as they secured their place in the quarter-finals of the 2026 tournament with a 3-2 win over Mexico.

On the face of it a narrow win over a nation below them in the FIFA World Rankings would not be all that impressive, but the fact it was in Mexico City, at the Azteca Stadium where the home side had only lost twice in their previous 89 matches, and did so playing the majority of the second half with ten men, made it really stand out.

Kane once again led by example for the Three Lions

Harry Kane (England) vs DR Congo Paul Childs via Action Images via Reuters

Jude Bellingham’s quickfire double in the first half set the Three Lions on their way before Julian Quinones pulled one back before half-time as the Mexicans put England under the cosh.

Jarell Quansah saw red soon after the break for a studs up high tackle, making England‘s life more difficult, but a foul on Anthony Gordon in the penalty area allowed Harry Kane to step up and convert from the spot to give the Three Lions their two-goal cushion back.

However, soon after Kane gave away a penalty, which Raul Jimenez converted to leave England with 21 minutes, plus what ended up being 12 minutes of injury-time, to hold on with ten men, which they did in epic circumstances.

Thomas Tuchel’s side will go on to face Norway in the last eight as they edge ever closer to glory.

Kane once again led his country from the front, getting an assist for Bellingham’s second goal as well as the strike that put him on six for the tournament so far, one behind Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe and Erling Haaland in the race for the Golden Boot.

Kane made headlines for an incredible interview in the aftermath of the result, in which he had lost his voice, after a long match and then singing Wonderwall with the Three Lions fans.

England World Cup Quiz

You scored

out of 20

He said: “That was a crazy game, we had to fight, we had to find something…I’ve just been singing there I can’t really talk. The occasion, the team, all the things against us… we found a way.”

You can see the hilarious interview here.

Donald Trump sends message to Harry Kane

Donald Trump (US President) at World Cup draw REUTERS/Stephanie Scarbrough

Kane now has 85 goals in an England shirt, putting him joint eighth on the list of all-time top international goalscorers around the world.

And he has a new supporter, it seems, in USA president Donald Trump.

Trump has not been present at a match at the tournament yet, despite being heavily involved in the build-up to the competition getting started, even given the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize by Gianni Infantino at the draw for the tournament.

But he was watching on from afar as England beat Mexico, posting on Truth Social after the game: “Harry Kane of England is a GREAT player!!!”

England will take on Norway in the quarter-finals on Saturday night, with kick-off at 8pm UK time.

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FIA Release Statement on Why British Grand Prix Ended Under Safety Car

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The FIA has released a statement following a confusing end to the British Grand Prix that saw a record crowd of F1 fans robbed of what could have been a dramatic one-lap shootout finish.

The safety car had been deployed after Max Verstappen crashed out and it looked all set to come in at the end of the penultimate lap when a “safety car ending” message was displayed. However, the safety car continued round the final corner, leaving spectators in a state of confusion and meaning that the race was to finish in a neutralised state.

Fans reacted angrily and could be seen to be leaving before the conclusion of the race and booing could be heard as the pack crossed the line.

A Dramatic British Grand Prix Ended in Farcical Scenes

After Red Bull’s Verstappen lost control of his RB22 and went spinning off into the gravel trap on lap 48 at turn 15, the safety car was deployed as the Dutchman’s car had to be removed by marshals following his retirement.

This left teams with a decision to make in regards to tyres. Both Ferrari’s decided to pit for new rubber, expecting to see the green flag again before the end of the race. Charles Leclerc managed to rejoin still in the lead, but Lewis Hamilton had been jumped by Mercedes’ George Russell who decided to continue on worn mediums.

The lack of a restart meant that Hamilton ultimately lost second place and wasn’t able to challenge Russell on his fresher tyres, and therefore sacrificed three points as he chases the Drivers’ Championship.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc celebrates on the podium after winning the British Grand Prix with Mercedes' George Russell who finished second and Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton who finished third Credit: REUTERS/Andrew Boyers

FIA Spokesperson Explains Controversial Finish to British Grand Prix

The FIA said the message that the safety car would come in was “displayed erroneously due to a software error.” Lapped cars that had been allowed to pass had not completed the necessary laps to enable a restart under the regulations.

“The Safety Car period regulation, Article B5. 13.5, states that one lap must be completed following the unlapping procedure. This process was followed by Race Operations,” the FIA statement read.

The events are reminiscent of the 2021 title decider in Abu Dhabi when Hamilton lost the title to Max Verstappen after the rules for similar directives regarding lapped cars were not followed.


2025 F1 driver line-up


F1 Driver Shocked Paddock With What He Said to Netflix Cameras at British Grand Prix

It was so out of character for the driver…

“Big, big congratulations to Charles, this is a great result for our team. I just didn’t have it today. I jumped the start, got a penalty, and Charles had the edge over me today,” Hamilton said after the race.

Championship leader Kimi Antonelli finished the race 16th after encountering technical issues, complaining that something was wrong with the steering. Before the issues, he had looked like he would extend his lead at the top by securing a podium.

An investigation into the events has been launched by the FIA.

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