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Posted: July 29, 2006

Athletics: Despite Win Over Bekele, Lagat Still A Miler

By Bob Ramsak
© 2006 TRACK PROFILE Report, all rights reserved
LONDON – While Bernard Lagat may not entirely agree, his stunning victory over world record holder Kenenisa Bekele at the Norwich Union London Grand Prix signaled that there is a new kid on the block in the men’s 5000.

With a blistering sub-52 second final lap, the two-time Olympic 1500 meter medallist kicked to an impressive 12:59.22 win, well ahead of the Ethiopian’s 13:00.04. Yet despite his commanding victory, Lagat insists that he’s still a miler who is making occasional visits to the longer distance.

“I’m still learning a lot about the 5000,” Lagat said, minutes after taking down Bekele, reigning and former world champions Ben Limo and Eliud Kipchoge, Commonwealth champion Augustine Choge, and others. “It’s a matter of being comfortable and being confident in new territory.” With his career, best, eclipsing the 12:59.29 he ran last September at Berlin’s ISTAF Golden League fixture, the Kenyan-born American edged ever closer to Bob Kennedy’s 12:58.21 U.S record.

Running comfortably throughout, the 31-year-old double national champion was never further back than fourth, and with the pace suiting him perfectly, he simply bided his time.

“I was running very comfortably. I knew it was going to be a 7:45 pace [for 3000 meters]. So for a miler like myself I knew that that pace was not going to be a killer.”

When Bekele made his decisive move with 500 to go --a move Lagat predicted -- Lagat simply stepped it up a notch as he approached the bell. “I knew that it wouldn’t have to be a rush to take lead. Just picking it up gradually and getting ready for the sprint.”

“I had a lot left,” Lagat said, suggesting that the 82/100s of a second victory margin was a bit deceiving. “With two laps to go I was very confident. I knew that if it was going to come down to a kick that I’d be very comfortable with that. It was like running the 1500 again.”

Lagat will now return to his home in Arizona to prepare for a return to more familiar territory, the 1500 at Zurich’s Weltklasse on August 18. But he concedes that his credentials in the longer race were strengthened considerably after his London performance.

“I beat a world champion, the world record holder,” he said. “It tells me that my 5000 strength is there. I think that in the future I’ll be able to enter a 5000 and be very comfortable. And feel confident that I can win regardless of who is in the race. All I have to do is train hard and believe that I can win the 5000 any time, any moment.”

Choge finished third in 13:00.74, exactly one second ahead of Kipchoge, who was fourth. Struggling over the final three laps, Craig Mottram of Australia, runner-up here the past two years, finished a distant seventh.

[ED. NOTE: More London features will be dispatched on Saturday evening.]


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