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Mo Farah is the man to beat in Birmingham

Written by 
Published in Athletics
Friday, 28 May 2021 01:20
Distance running legend favoured to triumph at Müller British 10,000m Champs and European Cup but Marc Scott and others will be biting at his heels with Olympic selection at stake

On Saturday June 5 in Birmingham the four-time Olympic champion Mo Farah tackles his first 10,000m track race since August 2017. His goal will be to qualify for the Olympics, but to win the race he will have to beat rising British star Marc Scott and reigning European champion Morhad Amdouni of France. It has the makings of one of the races of the year.

At his peak Farah would probably have breezed to victory. Now aged 38, though, he will have to bring his A-game if he wants to see off his younger rivals. Has the passing of time and his dalliance with the marathon blunted his speed? We will find out in a few days’ time.

The event contains two main elements – the European Cup for 10,000m and the British Olympic trials for the distance. It was due to be held in north London at the Night of the 10,000m PBs, but the pandemic put paid to those plans and instead it has been moved to the University of Birmingham track in the West Midlands.

Luke Gunn, head of athletics at the university, says the event is “on loan” to Birmingham for a year and he has received help and advice from Night of the 10,000m PBs organiser Ben Pochee. Unlike the popular north London event, though, there will be no spectators on June 5, although it will be streamed live.

Farah has been preparing in Arizona for the race. Similarly, Scott is based in the United States as part of the Bowerman Track Club and the Yorkshireman has been in fine form lately with 7:36.08 for 3000m, 13:05.13 for 5000m and 27:10.41 for 10,000m this year – the latter lifting him to No.2 on the UK all-time rankings behind Farah’s national record of 26:46.57.

Marc Scott (Mark Shearman)

Farah’s best was set 10 years ago, though, and Scott will not be the only up-and-coming Briton he will face in Birmingham either. Sam Atkin, who is from Grimsby but also based in the US, enjoyed a big breakthrough with 27:26.58 in December to go No.5 on the UK all-time lists. To put his time into perspective, it is faster than Britain’s former world record-holders Dave Bedford, Steve Jones and Brendan Foster ever ran.

READ MORE: Sam Atkin comes of age with stunning track breakthrough

As for Amdouni, the Frenchman has a best of 27:36.80, which was set when he was a close second to Richard Ringer of Germany in the European Cup 10,000m in London in 2018.

Bashir Abdi, who owns a near-identical PB with 27:36.40, is another contender. The Somalia-born Belgian athlete is one of Farah’s training partners and he won European 10,000m silver behind Amdouni in 2018.

If you’re looking for a dark horse to cause an upset, though, then this could be Cardiff runner Jake Smith. After running 60:31 at the World Half Marathon Championships last autumn, he ran 2:11:00 for the marathon recently despite only starting off as a mere pacemaker. However, after finishing 14th in the 5000m at the Diamond League in Gateshead this month in 13:38.01, it suggests he might struggle for pace in Birmingham.

Athletes from 26 nations are expected to compete and, as always, Spain will have a strong team. This time it includes Carlos Mayo and Juan Antonio Perez, the latter having clocked 27:46.08 this season. Reigning European Cup champion Yeman Crippa of Italy will not be in Birmingham, though.

Farah is not entirely rusty, of course. He stretched his legs to win the Djibouti Half-Marathon in March in 63:06. Last September he set a world record for the one-hour run in Brussels, too, whereas a few days later he beat Scott by 12 seconds in the Antrim Coast Half-Marathon in Northern Ireland with 60:27.

In addition to being reigning Olympic champion at 5000m and 10,000m, he has won 10 global track titles in the past decade and is keen to end his career with another Olympic title in Tokyo.

McColgan leads women’s entries

Eilish McColgan is the quickest on paper with a recent 30:58.94 in California which lifted her to No.5 on the UK all-time rankings. Almost exactly 30 years since her mum, Liz, won the world title in Tokyo, Eilish will hope to book her Olympic spot in the GB team to the same city this year.

She faces a competitive line-up, though, which includes fellow Brits Amy-Eloise Markovc, Verity Ockenden and Jess Judd. In March, Markovc won the European indoor 3000m title with Ockenden taking bronze. Then, in mid-May, Markovc finished less than a second outside the Olympic 10,000m qualifying standard with 31:25.91 in California, too, as Judd finished a fraction behind her in 31:25.98. Ockenden, meanwhile, ran a big 5000m PB of 15:03.51 in the US this month.

Eilish McColgan (Mark Shearman)

The most intriguing entrant, though, is Beth Potter. Since winning the British 10,000m title in 2017 she has become a member of the British Triathlon programme and focuses primarily on the swim-bike-run sport. Yet in early April she ran the fastest time ever recorded by a woman in a 5km road race with 14:41 and will undoubtedly start as one of the favourites in Birmingham.

As in the men’s race, there will be a new European Cup winner as the reigning champion, Lonah Salpeter of Israel, is not racing. Brits aside, the Germans have a strong team that includes Miriam Dattke, Katharina Steinruck and twins Deborah and Rabea Schoneborn, whereas Albania’s Luiza Gega and Selamawit Teferi from Israel are also contenders.

Look out too for a number of British runners who have been allowed to compete despite not being part of one of the teams in the European Cup. Notably these include the talented Natasha Cockram and Charlotte Arter, who both raced at the British Olympic marathon trials in Kew Gardens in March with Cockram clocking 2:30:03 and Arter dropping out.

Men
Olympic qualifying target: 27:28.00

GB team
Mo Farah (PB: 26:46.57)
Marc Scott (27:10.41)
Sam Atkin (27:26.58)
Jake Smith (29:01.08)
Emile Cairess (28:14.30)
Kristian Jones (28:33.17)

Other leading contenders
Bashir Abdi (BEL) (27:36.40)
Morhad Amdouni (FRA) (27:36.80)
Iliass Aouani (ITA) (27:45.81)
Juan Antonio Perez (ESP) (27:46.08)
Francois Barrer (FRA) (27:55.95)
Florian Cavalho (FRA) (28:04.05)
Carlos Mayo (ESP) (28:48.41)

Domestic entries
Matt Leach (28:21.05)
Mohamud Aadan (28:28.68)
Tom Anderson (29:14.30)
Phil Sesemann (debut)
James Hunt (28:59.63)
Rory Leonard (debut)
Mahamed Mahamed (29:01.34)
Hugo Milner (debut)

Women
Olympic qualifying target: 31:25.00

GB team
Eilish McColgan (PB: 30:58.94)
Amy-Eloise Markovc (31:25.91)
Jenny Nesbitt (32:38.45)
Jess Judd (31:25.98)
Samantha Harrison (debut)
Verity Ockenden (32:34.47)

Other leading contenders
Miriam Dattke (GER) (31:33.77)
Selamawit Teferi (ISR) (31:43.72)
Jasmijn Lau (NED) (32:20.75)
Luiza Gega (ALB) (32:31.69)
Maitane Melero (ESP) (32:27.00)

Domestic entries
Beth Potter (32:03.45)
Charlotte Arter (32:15.71)
Beth Kidger (debut)
Clara Evans (32:49.01)
Eleanor Bolton (debut)
Hannah Irwin (34:46.50)
Kate Avery (31:41.44)
Mhairi Maclennan (32:58.42)
Natasha Cockram (35:50.65)

Beth Potter (Mark Shearman)

For complete entries for the European Cup element of the day, CLICK HERE

Timetable

4:30pm – Elite para 1500m
4.45pm – Men’s domestic 10,000m
5.30pm – Women’s domestic 10,000m
6.15pm – Men’s domestic 10,000m
7pm – Women’s 10,000m inc European Cup B race
7.45pm – Men’s 10,000m inc European Cup B race
8.30pm – Women’s 10,000m inc European Cup A race & British Olympic trials
9.15pm – Men’s 10,000m inc European Cup A race & British Olympic trials
9.45-10.30pm – presentations

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