Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Farah thrills British crowd with second long-distance win

John Pye Associated Press

LONDON – Mo Farah didn’t want to leave anybody in doubt.

Roared on again by a boisterous, capacity crowd at the 80,000-seat Olympic Stadium, Farah surged ahead late and held on Saturday to complete a long-distance double by winning the 5,000 meters in 13 minutes, 41.66 seconds.

He still had the energy to do a few playful sit-ups on the track before he grabbed a British flag for the real celebrations.

The Somali-born Farah won the 10,000 meters on Britain’s “Super Saturday” last weekend, the same night Jessica Ennis won the heptathlon and Greg Rutherford the long jump.

One week later, it was entirely Mo’s moment. Almost nobody left the stadium until Farah was presented with his gold medal and the British anthem echoed around Olympic Park again.

“It’s unbelievable,” the 29-year-old Farah said. “Two gold medals, who would have thought that?”

He didn’t let the pressure of the home country’s great expectations hamper him in the 10,000, and he didn’t let the tactical plans of the Ethiopian runners hinder him in the 5,000.

Farah took the lead with 700 meters to go, staved off all challenges and, riding constant screams of encouragement, swept away on the home straight. He crossed the finish line with his arms up in triumph, then slapped his bald head and dropped to his knees.

Dejen Gebremeskel finished strongly to earn silver for Ethiopia in 13:41.98, and Thomas Longosiwa of Kenya took bronze in 13:42.36.

After his little demonstration of situps, Farah grabbed a Union Jack and took off for a victory lap.

He found his wife, Tania, who is pregnant with twins, and daughter Rhianna in the crowd lining the home stretch and hugged them.

“The crowd helped him. He ran 100 percent and they added another 10,” said U.S. runner Bernard Lagat (Washington State University), who finished fourth. “Everybody knew he was the favorite. I knew it. All 15 runners knew it. We were going to run against the favorite guy, he was the greatest of all.”

U.S. runner Galen Rupp trains with Farah and finished second to him in the 10,000. He had a charge at the lead late in the 5,000 but faded to finish seventh.