And once he hangs up his running shoes, Bolt wants to become a professional footballer in a club in England.
In fact, had Bolt not specialised in track and field event, he would probably have played cricket, smashing sixes and taking wickets, says the athlete in his first full-length autobiography "Faster Than Lightning" published by Harper Collins.
And why not? For, Bolt was excited watching the likes of another Jamaican cricket icon and paceman Courtney Walsh and batting legend Brian Lara and hung out with friends "smashing sixes around the school field" in his hometown.
Bolt believes he had all the ingredients of a good cricketer -bowling with speed coming down hard on batsmen, a fast fielder and as a batsman.
"In cricket, when I bowled, I could come down on the wicket hard, with speed and I was quick in the field... At the age of eight, I was taking wickets of cricketers a lot older than me, guys that were 10 or 11 years old...It wasn't long before I had opened the batting for Waldensia (his village school) a couple of years earlier than most kids even made the team", says Bolt.
Bolt acknowledges track and field was not something that had interested him before.
"My dad Wellesley was a cricket nut, and so were all my friends. Naturally, it's all we talked about. Nobody ever conversed about the 100 metres or the long jump at school... All the fun I needed came from taking wickets. Running quick was just a handy tool for taking down batsmen, like my height and strength".
