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Mo Farah makes history as first British man to take gold in Olympic 10000m

August 4, 2012   ·   25 Comments

Mohamed Farah wins a gold medal for Great Britain, London 2012

Mo Farah sprinted into athletics legend here in London’s disbelieving Olympic Stadium, becoming the first British man ever to win the Olympic 10000m title, indeed any global 25-lap title, with a run of rare courage and brilliance.

LONDON — Just as 80,000 were still beside themselves with delight over Jessica Ennis’s glorious heptathlon victory and Greg Rutherford’s long jump win, Farah capped it all by demonstrating why, in this land of the harrier, he stands as Britain’s greatest-ever male endurance runner with a 25-lap triumph which had every one of them on their feet again.

To cap the most spectacular hour in British athletics annals, the 29-year-old negotiated a rough and tumble race before racing to victory in a dazzling 27min 30.42sec. His training partner Galen Rupp could not get on terms as Farah put in a sensational last lap. Bronze medallist was Tariku Bekele ahead of his legendary brother Kenenisa Bekele.

It made Farah the first Briton, man or woman, ever to win the Olympic25-lap title – Mike McLeod had come closest with his silver in Los Angeles in 1984 – and the first since Liz McColgan back in Tokyo 1991 to beat the world over the distance in a major championship.

It also made up for his heartbreaking near-miss in last year’s world championship 10,000m when the Londoner lost out in a sprint finish with little-known Ethiopian Ibrahim Jeilan.

On that occasion, though shattered by the loss after another all-conquering season, Farah responded with great conviction a few days later to become the first British man to win the world 5,000m title.

Now he has the opportunity here next Sunday to add the Olympic 5,000m crown which has previously always deserted all of Britain’s brilliant male endurance runners and to join the immortal double winners like Lasse Viren, Miruts Yifter and Kenenisa Bekele.

Olympic champion carries the flags of Great Britain and Somaliland

Olympic champion carries the flags of Great Britain and Somaliland


What a moment for Farah, completing the incredible journey which took an eight-year-old boy all the way from Somalia, via Djibouti after civil war had broken out in his native land, to London and then on to the top of the world.

The lad from Mogadishu never really wanted to be a runner and was more interested in football but the mischievous kid who would land in all kinds of trouble at school in Hounslow now finds himself an icon of the sport.

What a way to race into legend. This was one of the most difficult events to win in the entire programme, up against a 29-strong field of dazzling talent, largely African, headed by the great Ethiopian Kenenisa Bekele, seeking to become the first man ever to win three consecutive titles in the longest track event.

Dangers lay everywhere, not least with the chances of the powerful Kenyan and Ethiopian trios to gang up on the home favourite.

In the early stages, Farah found himself jostled and hassled but he did not panic as he fell back and the Eritrean, Zersenay Tadese, kept injecting surges after a fairly sedate first 2km.

The home time boy kept his concentration even when he was being intimidated, running a mature race and with two laps left there were still 12 in contention. But with 450m left, Farah made his move, sped ahead and defied all the opposition’s efforts to catch him.
This seemed an incredible victory for Farah after his calamitous 2008 Olympics, when he failed even to reach the 5,000m final. Yet that was the spur to make him decide on a completely new approach to his running in a bid to beat the world.

Moving with his wife, Tania, who had been his childhood sweetheart, to America, and his stepdaughter, Rihanna, Farah threw in his lot with the brilliant Cuban-born coach Alberto Salazar, committing himself to a tough new regime in Portland, Oregon.

It was the work there which transformed him into a distance runner for everyone to fear. His 10,000m defeat in Daegu last year had been his only reverse of an all-conquering year and, though this season had started with a disappointing defeat in the world indoor championships, his form outdoors had hardly deteriorated as he entered last night’s race on the back of seven races unbeaten outdoors this summer.

The acclamation from the crowd, just as deafening as it had been for Ennis’s wonderful performance, told of just how popular this man is. You can undersatand why; if Ennis is the girl next door, Farah is the good lad who everybody within the sport adores.

He is funny, laid back, boyishly charming. He beat TV’s Cube which everyone laughed was miraculous enough. Now he has beaten the world and has to be thought of, simply, as one of the greatest athletes Britain has ever produced.

Yet we may have seen nothing yet. On Wednesday, the heats of the 5,000m begin and the MoBot celebration may just be about to go completely global.

- The Telegraph

August 4, 2012

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Readers Comments (25)

  1. Somaliaqueen says:

    Masha'ALLAH

  2. msomali says:

    I could've sworn to God Mo Farah is a Somalilander, what's this business of the "boy from Mogadishu?" Then again, it is the Telegraph, sketchy sources

  3. Kayse says:

    I think Somalis can out do both the Kenyans and Ethiopians if they stop fighting. Somalis are natural nomads who walked and ran thousands of miles for centuries. Their nomadic gene will out last the others no doubt.

    Everyone knows he was born in Mogadishu but his family and relatives are in Gabiley, we don't need to debate this guys.

    I personally want him to visit Gabiley because I believe there is a lot of talents there that need a role model to follow.

    • Jambazi says:

      he had already visited Gabiley

  4. mohamed cheers says:

    Mo Farah is a British Citizen. Also a Somalia born Somalilander from Somaliland. His father is
    from the Adan Madoobe clan of the President of Somaliland and his mother from Gabily of
    Somaliland according to Kayse?. Politics aside, overall he's a British athlete and his
    ancestral heritage a Somalilander But ofcourse a Britisher at first and his ancestral heritage
    remains a solidarity backstage.
    Cheers.

  5. ahmed says:

    kk,when you look very closely The picture he carreid somaliland regional flag in marcilona 2010 not world olympic event in london 2012.

    It is illegal in olympic rules and sometimes can carry big find or imprisonment to carry flag other Than The country your representing in world olympic games.

    Mr Mo farah he is talented good runner also mr bille,somalis can Produce good runners if They put Their act together.

    It does not matter whether he is from gabiley, garabaharey,galinsoor, first This victory goes to britain and somalis.

    It is time Mo & bille given full membership somali olympic committee They can help select good future runners.i know some of The delusionist will argue he from s/land not really relevant That.

    • DAROODmadhane says:

      you are dar00d and from bummland. yoor people are good for nothing. everything good comes from somaliland check your history you silverback

      • abdi says:

        No he is crazy id@@r.

  6. Ali Dheere says:

    Mohammed Farah made every Somali and British have goosebumps last night. All Somalis, from wherever they are felt proud.

    Bravo Mo! May Allah make it easy for you to win the 5,000km on Wednesday so that we may enjoy another session of goosebumps.

  7. Samira says:

    He was born in moqadisho and in any case no one recognizes "somaliland" probably the reason they don't have anyone from a place called somaliland.

    • Abdiwahab says:

      shut up u ugly faqash orphan he is an isaaqi and somaliland will be recognised goodbye failed zoomalia only somalilanders can celebrate kapeesh

      • Barre says:

        Don't say that it's ramadan my brother and she is a girl

      • Yusufh says:

        Abdiwahab
        Kapeesh is a Jewish phrase…..

    • abdi says:

      samira,your right well said.

  8. khaatumo citizen says:

    mo farah was born in mogadishu, lived in djibouti, originally from Gabiley, moved to england, trained in america, both americans and british take pride in him equally, we somalis should be proud of him, even though I think it would have been better if he was repping somalia.

    • DAROODmadhane says:

      he was from gabily and just claimed he is from mogadisho like everyone to get asylum

  9. F.A. says:

    Yeay My relatives are from Gebiley too. We are closely related to him :) .. But who cares as long as he is Somali, he makes us all proud from Somalia to Puntland to Somaliland to Djibouti to Somali-Ethiopia and Kenya Somali. We are all proud of him deep down ;) …

    Finaly something good about us. We can be great again (just stop all those stupid fights, we know we are better than than ;)

    Love to all Somalis out there, Gebiley loves you.

  10. Yusufh says:

    He did fantastic, but why did he carry the Somaliland flag? He is not a Somalilander. The British press and TV say he was born in Mogadishu by south Somali parents?

  11. I Jama says:

    Congrats Mo Farah. Impressive win.

    Mo Farah is 29 yrs old he was born in Mogadishu and left when he was eight yrs old. Which would be 21 yrs ago just before Somaliland declared its Independence. He would not have been able to stay in Gabiley due to war in that region where genocide as well as mass bomb mines still remained. Thus, going to Djibouti and leaving from their is correct for obvious reasons.

  12. Jamal says:

    Please do not politicised athletics Mo Farah is an African and he represent his Country the Great Britain and his second Country The Republic of Somaliland there is no the argument in that unless you envy it and the so-called Somalia they have sent two athletes and they brought shame to their failed country Somalia. Now Somaliland will have a legend athlete Mo Farah Congratulation and Jubilation for the two country of The Great Britain and The Republic Of Somaliland.

    • Abdullahi says:

      That's not fair don't take your anger out on the 2 somali athelets and don't call Somalia a failed state. Well at least they made to the olympics. A job well done to Mo Farah.

      • Abdisalam Jamal says:

        The two Somali athelties they were supose to qualify the standard made by the Olympics in order to compite in International games this shows how much is your country is totally corrupt and their leaders are always living in cheating the world that there is something croping up lies lies and totally corrupt that is why the world Boads of Organisation they call Somalia is the Most failed Country in the World and you have no any other resources of running your Govt other than Hand out Shame the country is being eaten by Traders who do not pay tax.

  13. Abdi Elmi says:

    Congratulations to Mo Farah. Finally someone puts Somalia on the map for a good reason.

  14. kabocalaf says:

    Well done Mo and well done Britain. I am a SomBrit too and I felt doubly proud.
    But are Wahabbi surwaalgaabs getting to Mo? Little signs say so..the daft little beard he is despertaely trying to grow..the too many rakcahs on the track where Kenyans have been spitting all day…
    If he goes down that road he would've wasted his win and let down his race, nation and country.


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