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Usain Bolt from Jamaica competes with Yunier Perez from Cuba to win the 100metres men’s event at the Golden Spike athletic meeting in Ostrava, Czech Republic, on Wednesday. Image Credit: AP

Ostrava: First of all the caveat: Usain Bolt has made a fool of the doubters before and he probably will again.

He remains unwavering in his conviction that he will “be fine” when it comes to defending his world title in London in less than six weeks’ time and it would be imprudent for anyone to suggest otherwise.

But, on the basis of both his health issues and his two runs so far this season, there is no hiding from the significant amount of work required in a short time.

It was something his coach Glen Mills had admitted prior to Bolt’s sluggish 100 metres victory at the Golden Spike in the Czech Republic Wednesday night.

“His preparation is not normally where it is at this time, so he certainly has ground to catch up,” Mills said yesterday.

So it seems. Victory should have been a given and yet somehow it almost did not happen.

The cobwebs had required little more than a light dusting on his seasonal debut in Kingston earlier this month, where he beat a supporting cast of Jamaican has-beens and never-will-bes by running 10.03 sec.

This time around his rivals featured a handful of eastern Europeans, an ageing Cuban and a Turkish sprinter who had switched allegiance because he could not make the Jamaican team.

In terms of a legitimate 100m race it looked pitiful. As it turned out, Bolt was thankful not to have faced any tougher competition.

Slow out of the blocks, the eight-time Olympic champion trailed at halfway before just about overhauling Cuba’s Yunier Perez in the closing stages.

His time was 10.06 sec and the winning margin just 0.03 sec. There were even suggestions he may have been limping slightly after crossing the line.

“I never worry. I just need to go to the doctor [former Bayern Munich doctor Hans-Wilhelm Muller-Wohlfahrt] and get everything checked out to make sure it is smooth,” Bolt said.

“It’s just my back as always. It is a bit tight. But I didn’t get injured and that’s the key thing. It’s just about sorting it out and I should be fine for London.”

Perhaps this was the shock he needed to halt the pedestrian tempo of what has been little more than a final-season exhibition tour.

For all the goodwill offered to the sport’s most illustrious figure, there can be no doubting that the serious business must begin now. Bolt has just one more race scheduled, at the Monaco Diamond League, before he heads to the London World Championships.

Then he will be gone. The other headline act of the night was Mo Farah, who was attempting to break the British 10,000m record of 26 min 46.57 sec he set in 2011 — a time before knighthoods, Olympic titles and global success.

Hamstrung by a lack of credible opposition to push him to new heights, his personal best remained intact, but victory was never in doubt as he crossed the line in 27 min 12.09 sec.