Is Farah the world’s best distance athlete ever?
RIGHT at the last, Mo Farah’s unbeatable air could not stand up to another examination by the world’s best distance runners as he was denied one final global triumph in his farewell championship track race on Saturday.
As the Briton was consoled – and congratulated on a peerless track career – by his competitors following his world 5 000 metres silver in the stadium where his legend was first properly sculpted in 2012, the only question that remained was where he stands in the annals of track distance running.
There is a powerful argument to say, after 10 straight global championship victories stretching back to the 2011 world 5 000 metres triumph in Daegu, that the 34-year-old is the greatest we have ever seen on the track.
Despite his defeat on Saturday, his ability, time and again, to fend off every challenge and tactic thrown at him – from Ethiopian and Kenyan athletes ganging up on him to being spiked and bruised in physical races – and still sprint to victory was unprecedented during an incredible six-year reign.
His ability to strike for home with that long, loping stride, anywhere from 600 metres to 100 metres out – and then to find yet another gear when it seemed as if he was flat out – marked him as a unique talent.
Yet being considered the best racer is very different from being seen as the greatest distance athlete of all-time.
Sebastian Coe, the IAAF President and a massive fan of Farah, set the ball rolling when declaring that Haile Gebrselassie was the greatest.
“I’m tough on this,” said Coe, himselfa candidate for best middle-distance runner of them all.
“For me that still has to be Haile Gebrselassie, for the distances that he covered, the titles he won and the world records he broke.”
In championship running, Farah won 10 on the trot before Saturday’s setback, compared with Gebrselassie’s six in a row at 10 000 metres and Kenenisa Bekele’s best run of four championship wins in succession at both distances.
Yet the two Ethiopian greats also went chasing records to extraordinary effect, Bekele setting a total of three new world marks at 5 000m and 10 000m and Gebrselassie seven at the two events.
Farah, pictured, has never been down that route, with his capacity for really fast times never examined.
It remains an extraordinary fact that the most successful championship runner ever at 5 000m with five global titles, is ranked only the 31st-fastest of all time, at 12.53.11. Bekele holds the record at 12:37.35.
At 10000 metres, in which Farah has also won a record five global golds, he is also still only the 16th-fastest (26:46.57), nearly half a minute down on Bekele’s world record of 26:17.53.
Bekele, a year older than Farah at 35, won nine global golds, once went unbeaten for eight years at 10 000 metres, won 11 world cross-country titles and now holds the second-fastest marathon time in history (2.03.03).
For the moment, even if Gebrselassie was the great Ethiopian trailblazer, it seems fair to rank Bekele the highest for his all-round achievements on the track, country and roads.
Yet Farah, who has run only one marathon, believes he can make a big impact on the roads.
The most amazing tale in the annals of British athletics may not quite have run its course yet.
As Farah said on Saturday: “This is end of in terms of major championships, I’m done. I’ve closed that chapter of my life. I want to start a new challenge in my life.” – Reuters