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I’m back, Gatlin warns after Doha victory

Justin Gatlin celebrates his win in Doha.

Justin Gatlin celebrates his win in Doha.

Justin Gatlin, dead and buried after a four-year doping ban that saw him, in desperation, mull a potential career in American football, marked his return among the top sprinters when scorching to a blistering 9.87s to win the 100m at the opening leg of the 14-meet Diamond League in Doha.

Gatlin’s time, his fastest outdoor season opener since he started professional sprinting at the age of 19, places him firmly in the same bracket as absent Jamaican arch-rivals Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake.

Bolt and Blake skipped this meet, preferring to open their seasons on home soil and clocking 9.82 and 9.84sec repectively.

Fellow Jamaican Asafa Powell finished just one-hundredth behind Gatlin in Doha, setting up the prospect of a battle royale between the US and the Caribbean island’s finest sprinters come this summer’s London Olympic Games.

“I want everyone to know Justin Gatlin is back and I want the Olympic title,” insisted Gatlin.

It would be an unlikely tale for the athlete who claimed 100m gold at the Olympics in Athens in 2004, but then fell foul of drugs and served a four-year ban, coming back in late 2010.

His path back to form, and acceptance by meet directors and fans, saw him win a second world indoor 60m title in Istanbul in March, after a first success way back in 2003.

“You’ve got to take track and field as a soap opera with spikes on,” Gatlin said of the global athletics circuit.

Wherever he goes, there is always a question on doping lurking, something he never shies away from.

“I feel that whatever time we’ve served, innocent or guilty, we’ve served that time. Taking that privilege (of competing) away from us, after being tested again and again, is unjust,” is how Gatlin’s measured reply goes.

He even went to pains to stress that he had only happy memories of competing in Doha, where he ran 9.77sec in 2006 to match Powell’s then world record, only for it to be rescinded after the doping violation came to light.

On Friday, Powell got away to his usual blistering start, only to seize up at the vital moment in the run-in to the line, Gatlin producing his trademark final surge to win by a head.

“I was feeling a little sluggish, but that felt great,” said Gatlin.

“Everybody wants to see great competition. They’ve watched the Usain Bolt show for a couple of years, they want to see someone else in the mix and I’m happy to step up and be in the mix as well.

“The Jamaicans have got their team together well, so we have to do that as well. But the US has always had good racers, we have Tyson Gay, Walter Dix and me. I’m back!”

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