Mo Farah has his golden moment! Briton makes history by winning 10,000m and his friend Chris Thompson takes silver

By Neil Wilson in Barcelona

Pure joy: Mo Farah celebrates victory in Barcelona


Mo Farah, a giant grin on his face, ended 76 barren years for Britain's 10,000 metre runners when he crossed the line in the Olympic Stadium to win the European gold that had eluded generations of great competitors.

And the celebration doubled when his friend and training partner Chris Thompson chased him down the straight to win the silver in a time shared with Italian bronze medallist Daniele Meucci.

The British pair had trained together in the French Pyrenees and they helped each other in the race. When they accompanied each other on the victory lap, two Union flags were linked to the Somalian flag of Farah's birth.

The victor declared: 'That was amazing. This has never been done before and it feels just great. To win with him second is the best result I could have expected.'


Friends reunited: Farah and Thompson embrace after their glory run in Barcelona


Thompson pointed to his 27-year-old friend in the tunnel that exits the track and said: 'He is the greatest British endurance runner ever. And I'm the second best! Down the back straight it was all British flags. It was a glimpse of 2012, the best half-hour of my life.'

Even in the 1970s, the most glorious decade of endurance running in Britain when David Bedford and Brendan Foster shattered world records, no Briton managed to break the duck in Olympic, world or European competition by winning gold in this longest of track events. Such was the size of this triumph.

The 10,000 is a matter as much of mind as body. Rivals have to be out-thought as well as out-run and Farah played them all like a classical conductor.

He let others set a slow pace for 15 laps until Thompson became bored and went to the front. His friend, ever watchful, closed on his heels. The pace increased, the field spread but still two Spaniards dogged the Britons and four others stayed in contention.

Finally, with less than six laps to go, Farah made his move. Only Spain's Ayad Lamdassem stayed with him and with just three to go they were in conversation. Now the Spaniard led and Farah followed but with 320m to go, Farah chose the moment when they were lapping a group of back-markers to sprint.

The Spaniard was taken by surprise and done in. Thompson passed him and held off a late challenge from Meucci.


Out in front: Farah is tracked by Ayad Lamdassem, with Chris Thompson just behind


Four years ago, in Gothenburg, Farah was denied a European title at 5,000m when he was out-sprinted to the line by Spaniard Jesus Espana. Just nine one-hundredths of a second denied him the gold. This was his revenge.

Four years ago, the decline from the days of Bedford and Foster was so marked that Britain did not even enter this event.


The first sign of resurgence came in April when Thompson, an outstanding teenager who suffered a succession of injuries, ran 25 laps for the first time in California in a time only Eamonn Martin and Jon Brown had ever bettered among Britons.

Two weeks later, in only his second effort, Farah ran nearly a second quicker. Farah, a refugee from war-stricken Somalia when he was a boy, was always favourite to win the duel of two friends.

His championship record - a European silver at 5,000m, gold in the European cross-country in 2006 and European indoor 3,000m gold last year - showed the finer pedigree and so it proved.


source: dailymail

Sol Campbell snubs Sunderland and Arsenal as he joins Newcastle on a free transfer

By Colin Young

Free agent: Sol Campbell's Arsenal contract expired earlier this summer


Sol Campbell is poised to sign a year-long deal to join Newcastle on Wednesday in a major snub to Arsene Wenger and Steve Bruce.

The former Arsenal and England defender, who had a medical on Tyneside on Tuesday, is available on a free after coming to the end of his Gunners contract.

He is expected to agree a �35,000-a-week deal in the next 24 hours, making it the fifth time in his 18-year career he has moved without incurring a fee.

Moves from Tottenham to Arsenal, on to Pompey, then the ill-fated excursion to Notts County, back to Arsenal and now to Newcastle would have cost millions.

Newcastle boss Chris Hughton is set to pull off the biggest transfer of his year in charge by landing the 35-year-old, and the switch to the North East will enable Campbell to live in his new Northumberland house with his new bride, Fiona Barratt.


Summer loving: Campbell married Fiona Barratt in Corbridge, Northumberland, earlier this month


The central defender has been offered a year-long contract with the option of an additional 12 months.

His decision to join Hughton, whom he worked with at Tottenham, is a blow to Arsenal manager Wenger and Sunderland boss Bruce as well as Celtic manager Neil Lennon, who, like Bruce, met the defender for talks.

Newcastle stepped up their search for an experienced centre half when they discovered last week they will be without Steven Taylor for at least three months after surgery to a shoulder injured in their opening pre-season friendly at Carlisle United.

Campbell finished last season with a second spell at Arsenal and, although he was released by the club at the end of May, he was expected to be offered a third term at the Emirates.


His decision to move north increases the pressure on Wenger to find defensive recruits before the start of the season.

Arsenal have already lost Campbell, William Gallas and Mikael Silvestre, and Swiss defender Johan Djourou is still fighting back from knee surgery and will not be fit for the start of the campaign.

French defender Laurent Koscielny has joined from Lorient on a long-term deal but Wenger will want extra bodies in for the coming season and will have regarded Campbell as a safe fall-back option.

Meanwhile, former England forward Peter Beardsley has been appointed reserve-team coach at St James' Park, where he will be assisted by Steve Stone.



Good move by Man of Steel
by Martin Keown


My old team-mate Sol Campbell provided Arsenal with a bit more steel last season at vital times and he will provide that for Newcastle as they return to the Premier League.

They have been away only one season but there will be uncertainty there about whether they belong at that level and he can help with that.

Newcastle have been attracted to a powerful, quick, experienced defender, the sort of player who is in short supply. He did enough with Arsenal in his time back there to show people that he is still at the races.

He must have been close to the England World Cup squad and maybe now they wish they had taken him.

My only concern for him is that he has missed about four weeks of preseason. He will need about six weeks' training to be where he wants to be but he has plenty to offer and I wish him all the best.


source: dailymail
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