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‘I still have the hunger’: Mo Farah calls time on track career but will run on

Mo Farah will return to run the London Marathon in October after finally calling time on his track career. The 39-year-old athlete’s decision to stick to the roads had been widely expected after he endured a shock defeat to a club runner, Ellis Cross, in the Vitality 10km race in May and then did not attempt to qualify for the world championships in Eugene this month.

However, while Farah concedes he is no longer the athlete he was he says he will not contemplate retirement until after he runs in the Big Half in September and the London Marathon a month later.

“I am getting on a bit,” Farah said. “But do I still have the hunger, am I willing to put in the work and the miles? Yes. I’ve been putting in consistent mileage and I still have that fight in me. Until you lose it I don’t think I should think about retiring.

“But being realistic, can your body do this? I’ve watched tennis and Andy Murray, the guy still has that fight in him but his body doesn’t allow him. So I’m planning two races at the minute and then go back and see where I am. Can my body compete with these guys at this level, that’s the question which will come afterwards.”

Pressed on whether he would take advice on retirement from his coach, Gary Lough, or his wife, Tania, Farah said: “That decision can only come down from me, not my manager, not my wife or my kids. It’s me who is putting in the work week in, week out. There will be a time, but I don’t even know myself.

“I am doing good sessions but it’s not what I was doing right before championships. That’s one of the reasons you want to come back. I’m still doing sessions normal people can’t do. You still feel like you’ve still got it.”

Farah admitted he was disappointed not to be able to run this month

Read more on theguardian.com