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Victory sees Bekele ready to take Dublin at the double
23 March 2002 - Dublin, Ireland With a kick
at the bell worthy of a track race, Kenenisa Bekele, from
Ethiopia, seized the initiative in the mens short race
at the IAAF/Sport Ireland World Cross Country Championships
to run away from a posse of rivals on Saturday.
The final lap in this instance was not a mere 400 metres
of flat rubber, but nearly two kilometres of muddy grassland
at Leopardstown racecourse. Yet the in-form Ethiopian, made
good use of the downhill stretch at the start of the lap,
and a strong following wind, to build an unassailable lead
from his clutch of pursuers, led by Luke Kipkosgei, of Kenya.
Bekele, aged 19, won the 4km race easing up in 12min 11sec,
to add to the junior gold and short-race silver he won over
the course of the weekend at last years championships
in Ostend, Belgium.
The teenage phenomenon then confirmed that he would be racing
again on Sunday, in the 12km classic long race, attempting
a golden double that no man has yet managed to achieve.
I am very happy to complete the first half of what
I hope will be a double this weekend, Bekele said. I
felt very comfortable today and in fact I eased back towards
the end to save myself for the long race.
I am disappointed we did not win the team, but for
me this weekend is all about winning two individual gold medals,
said Bekele, who is advised on his training by Haile Gebrselassie.
Kipkosgei took the silver medal here in 12:18, with Ethiopias
Hailu Mekonnen third in 12:20. Both runners agreed that the
course is a tough one, and was made tougher still by the strong
wind in the face of the runners as they worked up the long
uphill towards the finish.
Australias Craig Mottram produced an impressive effort
to latch on to the lead group and finish fifth, and first
non-African, as Kenya took the team title for the fifth successive
year.
Report provided by the IAAF. www.iaaf.org
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