Usain Bolt won the men’s 200m to claim his second Rio 2016 gold, his eighth at an Olympics, and keep alive his hopes of an unprecedented ‘treble treble’.

The Jamaican ran 19.78 seconds to come home ahead of Canada’s Andre de Grasse and France’s Christophe Lemaitre.

Britain’s Adam Gemili clocked the same time as Lemaitre, but was denied his first Olympic medal in a photo finish.

Bolt, 29, has already won the 100m in Rio and will run in the 4x100m relay final on Friday (02:35 BST, Saturday).

Bolt is aiming to match his achievement of claiming gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at both Beijing 2008 and London 2012.

The Jamaican, who said in February he would retire after the 2017 World Championships, has won all eight of the Olympic finals in which he has appeared.

“The fact I came here and executed what I wanted to is a brilliant feeling,” he told BBC Sport.

“I wasn’t happy with the time when I crossed the line but I’m excited I got the gold medal – that’s the key thing.”

Only US sprinter and long jumper Carl Lewis and Finnish long-distance runner Paavo Nurmi have won more Olympic gold medals in athletics.

Lewis won nine golds between 1984 and 1996, while Nurmi also won nine between 1920 and 1928.

“What else can I do to prove I am the greatest? I’m trying to be one of the greatest, to be among Ali and Pele,” added Bolt.

“I have made the sport exciting, I have made people want to see the sport. I have put the sport on a different level.”

Bolt believed he could break his world record of 19.19 and even go under 19 seconds in Rio’s Olympic Stadium.

So the slow time – by his standards at least – left the Jamaican gesticulating angrily as he crossed the line more than two tenths of a second ahead of De Grasse.

But Bolt quickly broke into a beaming smile, celebrating with a trademark ‘Lightning Bolt’ as thousands of fans chanted his name.

Gemili ‘heartbroken’ after missing podium

Gemili, 22, was competing in his first Olympic 200m final and was not tipped to challenge after scraping through as one of the two fastest semi-final losers.

But the 2014 European champion, running in lane two, clocked a time of 20.12 – leaving him just three thousandths of a second from beating Lemaitre to the podium.

“I am heartbroken. I put so much into that run,” he told BBC Sport.

“I lost my form at the end and to get so close at the end is heartbreaking. I am absolutely gutted.”

‘I expected faster’
“I expected a little faster but the race is what it is. Usain Bolt was straight into the lead and never relinquished it. This was a quality race.

“You could not separate the guys for bronze. I don’t think Adam Gemili could have done more to get that bronze.

“If you look at his race and his position, he finished ahead of guys like [former Olympic and world 400m champion] LaShawn Merritt.”

Colin Jackson, Great Britain’s two-time world 110m hurdles champion:

“Usain Bolt was so aggressive out of the blocks. Andre de Grasse said he wanted to go with Usain and that is what he has done. If I am honest, many of the athletes will be disappointed with their times.

“My heart goes out to Adam Gemili. To be fourth with the exact same time as third place, Adam will be devastated no doubt but he is still fourth in the world, he has to remember that and he has a bright, bright future ahead of him.”

‘I was there’
What other athlete can turn even former Olympic champions giddy? While Usain Bolt was weaving his way through what seemed a never-ending line of journalists, on the sidelines was four-time Olympic champion Sanya Richards-Ross, shouting his name, begging for him to flash a smile at her so she could capture it on her smartphone, tell people ‘I was there’.

“The benefit of also having an Olympic gold in the bag is access, so while others simply continued to yell his name, Richards-Ross was allowed to join the throng of journalists and get the picture she seemed to crave nearly as badly as Olympic gold. But just like anyone else who gets a selfie with the greatest sprinter who has lived, she seemed to bounce back to her seat – overawed, overjoyed.

“No-one can do what Usain Bolt does either on or off the track.”

Source: BBC