<p>Usain Bolt has failed to top the list of the most written-about athletes for the first time in years in a sign that track and field is emerging from the hold the retired Jamaican sprint legend had over the sport.</p>.<p>World Athletics said that in 2022, Indian javelin star <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/neeraj-chopra" target="_blank">Neeraj Chopra </a>displaced the charismatic Bolt, who is still the world record holder in the 100m and 200m despite retiring in 2017.</p>.<p>Chopra had a terrific year, finishing runner-up in the world championships in Eugene, Oregon -- only the second Indian to win a global medal after Anju Bobby George's bronze in the women's long jump in 2003 -- and became the first athlete from his country to win the Diamond League final for javelin throw.</p>.<p>That followed up his Olympic gold medal in Tokyo last year.</p>.<p>Chopra leads the way with 812 articles ahead of a troika of Jamaican women sprint stars, Elaine Thompson-Herah, with 751 articles, world 100m champion Shelley-Ann Fraser-Pryce (698) and world 200m champion Shericka Jackson (679), with Bolt still featuring in 574 articles.</p>.<p>World Athletics quoted figures from media analysis company Unicepta.</p>.<p>The federation's president Sebastian Coe said 2022 "looks and feels very different to me".</p>.<p>"It is an interesting one. For the first time this year Usain Bolt has not led the list of the most written about athletes of the year," Coe said in a briefing with international news agencies.</p>.<p>He said the discussion had moved on from 2021 and talk of Caster Semenya and Christine Mboma, two athletes who have had to change events because they have elevated testosterone levels.</p>.<p>"The year before it was pretty self-evident why some of those athletes were on the list: Caster Semenya, Christine Mboma," he said.</p>.<p>"This year looks and feels very different to me."</p>.<p>Coe said Bolt, the winner of the sprint double for three Olympics in a row, still played a valuable role promoting the sport but his time was curtailed by a host of sponsorship and publicity deals he has netted since retiring from the track.</p>.<p>"He did a lot of work around Tokyo (the Olympics last year) and he has been there and thereabouts for Diamond League events," said Coe.</p>.<p>"We recognise any time Usain Bolt can give to the sport but he does have a pretty full dance card.</p>.<p>"I know the guys who work alongside him and he is pretty busy commercially, and contracted across extensive areas.</p>.<p>"The more time with Usain the better but there are constraints across that."</p>.<p>Coe said the increased exposure for other athletes was due reward for a "really challenging year" and one "we did not plan for," as the world championships had been moved a year later to accommodate the pandemic-delayed Olympics.</p>.<p>"We should not also forget the Commonwealth Games and the European Championships and they also competed in a full Diamond League season plus a lot of Continental Tour events and national selections," he said.</p>.<p>"For me it is a fabulous example of resilience and fortitude and simple determination to stay at the top of their game and they have done that.</p>.<p>"It is primarily through their efforts that athletics has really started to grow again in popularity and gained more broadcast hours."</p>.<p>Coe -- who said he was looking forward to the world championships in Budapest in 2023, which is the 40th anniversary of the inaugural event held in Helsinki -- said it had been a year to treasure given the disruption caused by Covid in the two years previously.</p>.<p>"I am very, very proud of what we have achieved to set aside the 2020-2021 travails," said the two-time Olympic champion.</p>.<p>"To be able to get as much off the starting blocks was a real testimony that we bounced back stronger than many other sports."</p>
<p>Usain Bolt has failed to top the list of the most written-about athletes for the first time in years in a sign that track and field is emerging from the hold the retired Jamaican sprint legend had over the sport.</p>.<p>World Athletics said that in 2022, Indian javelin star <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/neeraj-chopra" target="_blank">Neeraj Chopra </a>displaced the charismatic Bolt, who is still the world record holder in the 100m and 200m despite retiring in 2017.</p>.<p>Chopra had a terrific year, finishing runner-up in the world championships in Eugene, Oregon -- only the second Indian to win a global medal after Anju Bobby George's bronze in the women's long jump in 2003 -- and became the first athlete from his country to win the Diamond League final for javelin throw.</p>.<p>That followed up his Olympic gold medal in Tokyo last year.</p>.<p>Chopra leads the way with 812 articles ahead of a troika of Jamaican women sprint stars, Elaine Thompson-Herah, with 751 articles, world 100m champion Shelley-Ann Fraser-Pryce (698) and world 200m champion Shericka Jackson (679), with Bolt still featuring in 574 articles.</p>.<p>World Athletics quoted figures from media analysis company Unicepta.</p>.<p>The federation's president Sebastian Coe said 2022 "looks and feels very different to me".</p>.<p>"It is an interesting one. For the first time this year Usain Bolt has not led the list of the most written about athletes of the year," Coe said in a briefing with international news agencies.</p>.<p>He said the discussion had moved on from 2021 and talk of Caster Semenya and Christine Mboma, two athletes who have had to change events because they have elevated testosterone levels.</p>.<p>"The year before it was pretty self-evident why some of those athletes were on the list: Caster Semenya, Christine Mboma," he said.</p>.<p>"This year looks and feels very different to me."</p>.<p>Coe said Bolt, the winner of the sprint double for three Olympics in a row, still played a valuable role promoting the sport but his time was curtailed by a host of sponsorship and publicity deals he has netted since retiring from the track.</p>.<p>"He did a lot of work around Tokyo (the Olympics last year) and he has been there and thereabouts for Diamond League events," said Coe.</p>.<p>"We recognise any time Usain Bolt can give to the sport but he does have a pretty full dance card.</p>.<p>"I know the guys who work alongside him and he is pretty busy commercially, and contracted across extensive areas.</p>.<p>"The more time with Usain the better but there are constraints across that."</p>.<p>Coe said the increased exposure for other athletes was due reward for a "really challenging year" and one "we did not plan for," as the world championships had been moved a year later to accommodate the pandemic-delayed Olympics.</p>.<p>"We should not also forget the Commonwealth Games and the European Championships and they also competed in a full Diamond League season plus a lot of Continental Tour events and national selections," he said.</p>.<p>"For me it is a fabulous example of resilience and fortitude and simple determination to stay at the top of their game and they have done that.</p>.<p>"It is primarily through their efforts that athletics has really started to grow again in popularity and gained more broadcast hours."</p>.<p>Coe -- who said he was looking forward to the world championships in Budapest in 2023, which is the 40th anniversary of the inaugural event held in Helsinki -- said it had been a year to treasure given the disruption caused by Covid in the two years previously.</p>.<p>"I am very, very proud of what we have achieved to set aside the 2020-2021 travails," said the two-time Olympic champion.</p>.<p>"To be able to get as much off the starting blocks was a real testimony that we bounced back stronger than many other sports."</p>