Sir Mo Farah has set his sights on breaking Steve Jones’s 32-year-old British record over 26.2 miles after
Desmond Trufant Womens Jersey confirming that he will run the London marathon in April. The announcement came after a weary Farah kicked clear of the New Zealander Jake Robertson with 250 metres remaining to win his fourth Great North Run in a row. Farah, who retired from the track in August after winning the 5,000m at the Diamond League meeting in Zurich, also confirmed that he would remain in the United States, where he trains at the Nike Oregon Project, but could move back to the UK in the next couple of years. Mo Farah calls time on GB career after victory in final track outing Read more The 34-year-old finished in a disappointing 2hr 8min 21sec in his only marathon in 2014 – more than a minute outside Jones’s best. But he believes that a change in training can help him go much quicker. “I’d like Steve Jones’s mark,” he said. “In 2014 I did a lot more track because I still wanted that. Now I will forget about that and focus completely on the road. Doing long runs, tempos and just try and learn from it. “I’m also taking ideas from other athletes, who run marathons, like Lelisa Desisa here who coaches himself. I asked: ‘What else do you have to do?’ He said it’s similar to the track but you do a certain mileage. You run consistently for two months and that’s it. I thought that sounds easy. But you have to learn from it.” For now Farah will continue to be based in America. When asked about
http://www.officialsfalconsauthenticshop.com/Devonta_Freeman_Jersey_Cheapwhether he would stay in Portland with the same coaching set up, he replied: “We have thought about coming back to the UK. I have missed the UK. But I have to put my kids first. They go to school in Portland so I have to plan ahead. But we would like to be back in the next couple of years, 100%. Go and watch my team [Arsenal] and do things I enjoy in the UK.” However, Farah again appeared to play down his chances of running the Olympic marathon in 2020, when he will be 37. “I’ll just see what happens,” he said. “It does play on my mind: ‘Do I think I could do Tokyo?’ Only if I’m good enough, if I get there and can get a medal, then yes. I wouldn’t let my country down. I would love to represent my country, like I’ve done on the track. But it just depends on how the marathon goes. If it goes so badly, then I won’t be there, right?” Advertisement Earlier Farah had to display all of his customary grit as he nearly paid the price for a lack of training when the 13.1-mile Great North Run exploded into life after a sedate start. It was Farah who initially pushed the pace, breaking up the leading field of nine with a 4min 28sec mile just before halfway, which left only Robertson and Desisa alongside him in the leading three. Yet when
http://www.footballpanthershop.com/Graham_Gano_Jersey_CheapRobertson kicked hard with four miles remaining, Desisa soon fell back and Farah also struggled to stay with him, before kicking clear in sight of the finish to win in 1:00.06, with the New Zealander six seconds back. “Jake almost got rid of me with three miles to go because I was hurting,” Farah said. “I was just hanging on and gritting my teeth. I expected him to push on but it was a great race. “Every part of my muscles is aching now. That was really, really tough. I have never been this sore. It’s been hard to motivate myself after Zurich, after the world championships, and I haven’t done as much trainingThat might be stretching it. Palace had 65% of possession but much of it came under the category of sterile domination. Yet it was conceivable that the centre-back Scott Dann could have had a hat-trick. “They had two fantastic chances, especially Dann’s header at the end,” the Burnley manager, Sean Dyche, said. Advertisement Dann headed wide, though, and he had been denied by twin goal-line clearances from Matthew Lowton and the excellent James Tarkowski. Christian Benteke had other opportunities. His radar was for once awry. When it functioned correctly, he met unexpected obduracy in the shape of Burnley’s reserve goalkeeper Nick Pope. Yet the damning element for Palace was that they rarely troubled a Premier League debutant. “Technically, a fantastic save,” Dyche said after the deputy was summoned when Tom Heaton landed awkwardly catching a cross. The England goalkeeper has a suspected dislocated shoulder. “If it is, it is not weeks [out], more like months,” Dyche said. He had “empathy, not sympathy” with De Boer, seeking out his counterpart for a consoling word. “I thought they were the better side,” he said. “I told him so. They were very good. They played with more freedom.” He attributed that to De Boer’s decision to jettison his favoured 3-4-3 formation for a more familiar 4-3-3. A winner could afford to be magnanimous. While Palace wrestle with an identity crisis, Burnley know who they are and what they have to do. “We had to fight for every
Greg Olsen Youth Jersey inch,” Dyche said. But a goal came gift-wrapped. Criticised for sideways passing under De Boer, Palace were quick to supply a defence-splitting ball. Sadly for the recalled Lee Chung-yong, the defence he bisected was his own. Brought in to supply Benteke, he instead picked out Chris Wood with a misguided attempt to find the goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey. Burnley’s record signing provided an assured finish to vindicate Dyche, who promoted the ?15m forward, the scorer of a late leveller against Tottenham last time out, to the starting 11. “We gave a very sloppy goal away,” said De Boer. If it suggested his players were eager to hasten his exit, they responded. “We showed spirit,” he said. Yet if Palace are pointless, goalless and possibly luckless and he may soon be jobless, Burnley are buoyant. They had already beaten Chelsea and drawn with Tottenham. More capital gains capped their profitable start to the season while Palace’s losses are mounting. De Boer’s job may yet be among them