Usain Bolt could be making
his way to Europe after being offered a two-year professional football contract
in Malta, reports said Tuesday, with the club saying it wanted to “write
history” with the signing.
Bolt, 32, has been on trial
with A-League club the Central Coast Mariners since arriving in Australia in
August in his bid to pursue a boyhood dream of becoming a footballer after
retiring from athletics last year.
The 100 metres world record-holder
scored his first two goals in professional football on Friday when he started a
pre-season game against second-tier Macarthur South West United in Sydney.
Malta club Valletta FC said
they had made a formal offer which includes playing in its upcoming cup final,
with chief executive Ghasston Slimen saying the move to snare Bolt was “about
writing history”.
“Usain Bolt broke the
record in Beijing (Olympics) in 2008, and I have followed him for the last
year-and-a-half on his football journey,” Slimen told the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation.
“We play the final of the
Super Cup on December 13, which we will win… so can you imagine Usain Bolt
lifting the Super Cup trophy 10 years after he broke the record in Beijing?
“This isn’t about money,
this is about history. This is something that they will talk about in 50 or 100
years’ time.”
A group of investors from
the Sanban Group in the United Arab Emirates acquired a majority stake in the
club last month, vowing to qualify for the group stages of Europe’s Champions
League.
Slimen admitted Bolt still
had to improve his footballing skills, but said he was inspired by the former
sprinter’s jubilant celebrations — including the trademark lightning bolt
victory pose — after the goals.
“I don’t want him to be
here on holiday, I want him training hard,” he said, adding that he wanted Bolt
to be lifting trophies during his stint at Valletta.
“I don’t want to make a big
fuss, I want him to sign the contract, get on the flight, arrive in Malta and
train, because we need to prepare for the Super Cup.”
The Australian agent who
arranged Bolt’s trial with the Mariners declined to confirm or deny the reports
when contacted by AFP on Tuesday.
Bolt does not yet have a
contract with the Mariners ahead of the start of the A-League season this
Friday, with the club’s chief executive Shaun Mielekamp saying in a statement
that the Jamaican “will continue his indefinite training period… until any
further notice”.
Media reports suggest the
Mariners are waiting for governing body Football Federation Australia to decide
whether it will contribute to a potential Aus$3 million (US$2.1 million) offer
to Bolt.
FFA head David Gallop said
Tuesday “the story of a contract in Europe is news to me”, but that any
financial support from the governing body would not be drawn from a marquee
fund set up to attract top players to the A-League.
“The ball is very much in
the Mariners court. They have to make a decision whether they want to move to
put Usain onto a contract,” Gallop told Macquarie Sports Radio.
“If they get to that point
(of signing Bolt) then we’ll look at what’s feasible for us but it can’t be
from the marquee player fund…. we can’t use that money but we’ll look at if we
can do anything else.”
The 32-year-old previously
tried out with clubs in Germany, South Africa and Norway to no avail.

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