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Usain Bolt in the running to join Australian football team

The Olympic sprinting champion follows his dream of playing professional football with the A-League's Central Coast Mariners.

Usain Bolt trains with the Australian football team
Image: Usain Bolt trains with the Australian football team
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Usain Bolt is in talks for a six-week trial to play football in Australia, his agent has said.

The eight-time Olympic gold medallist will start with the Central Coast Mariners from next month in a deal which could see him play for a season in Australia's A-League.

His football agent, Tony Rallis, said a "deal between the Mariners and Usain Bolt in principle has been agreed".

He added that the 31-year-old would be required to trial and that Football Federation Australia (FFA) should support his salary.

Usain Bolt on the pitch in France last month
Image: Usain Bolt on the pitch in France last month

Bolt, who is widely considered to be the greatest sprinter of all time, has long had an ambition to play professional football.

Since retiring from the track in 2017, the Jamaican athlete has trialled with Germany's Borussia Dortmund and Norway's Stromsgodset teams.

Bolt is widely considered to be the greatest sprinter of all time
Image: Bolt is widely considered to be the greatest sprinter of all time

Mr Rallis said: "If he's competitive, he will lift our A-League profile.

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"He will create dreams for young people and he will give the A-League a profile no amount of money can buy.

"This bloke's an ambitious athlete. The A-League needed a hero and we got superman."

Usain Bolt trains with the Australian football team
Image: Usain Bolt trains with the Australian football team

Mr Rallis said the owner of the Mariners would guarantee 70% of Bolt's salary - with the FFA expected to fund the remainder.

"Once the FFA comes back and says that they'll be part of the process, we're going to the trial," he said.

Usain Bolt and Norway's Fredrik Horn Myhre (L) vie for the ball during a friendly game
Image: Usain Bolt and Norway's Fredrik Horn Myhre (L) vie for the ball during a friendly game

Bolt - who earned the nickname of "Lightning Bolt" in the media - as a forward in a friendly match against the Norway national under-19 football team in June.

He expressed a desire to play for Manchester United if given a chance, saying it "would be like a dream come true" in an interview with The Guardian.

Cricket was the first sport to interest Bolt, and he has previously said that he would probably have been a fast bowler if he had not pursued sprinting.