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Results:
Men's results (12km)
1. Kenenisa Bekele, Ethiopia, 34:52.
2. John Yuda, Tanzania, 34:58.
3. Wilberforce Talel, Kenya, 35:20.
4. Richard Limo, Kenya, 35:26.
5. Charles Kamathi, Kenya, 35:29.
6. Albert Chepkurui, Kenya, 35:32.
7. Abderrahim Goumri, Morocco, 35:43.
8. Yonas Kifle, Eritrea, 35:47.
9. Enoch Mitei, Kenya, 35:49.
10. Jaouad Gharib, Morocco, 35:57.
Teams:
1. Kenya, 18 points.
2. Ethiopia, 43.
3. Morocco, 58.
4. France, 71.
5. United States, 107.
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Bekele defies
pundits to take historic double gold in Dublin
24 March 2002 - Dublin, Ireland - 19-year-old Kenenisa Bekele
from Ethiopia today ran into the history books as he became
the first athlete to win both the men's short and long cross
races at the World Cross Country Championships.
At the previous
year's edition of the IAAF World Cross Country Championships,
Bekele had given some insight into the depth of his talent
by successively taking silver in the men's short course race
and then going on to win the junior men's race, this year
he went one better.
Despite the convincing margin
of his win on Saturday in the short course race, few would
have predicted the consummate ease with which he would become
the first man to win both long and short course races.
After starting
in the lead pack, Bekele turned this into a one horse
race as he broke away from the pack together with Tanzania's
John Yuda, who made most of the running, the pair leaving
in their wake the favoured Kenyan taskforce of Richard Limo,
Charles Kamathi and Wilberforce Talel.
Yuda was the
leader from the start, taking first the pack and then Bekele
alone through all of the laps, though it was only in the second
to last lap that the two really started to break away from
the followers.
Earlier, another
Kenyan Enock Mitei had attempted to force the pace, chopping
and changing places with Yuda and putting on the occasional
burst of speed before dropping back into the pack, but at
each occasion it was Yuda who pulled him back and laid down
his law in the front, despite looking overexerted for much
of the second half of the race.
Meanwhile, Bekele,
who had stormed away from the rest of the field in the men's
short course race on Saturday, looked as though he was out
on a training run as he loped along at Yuda's heels.
He said after
the race that he had already encountered Yuda and knew what
to expect: "I know that Yuda is very strong. It is not the
first time that I met him and I knew that he would make the
pace hard so I thought that I would run with him and then
try to beat him at the finish."
Which is exactly
what Bekele did, almost repeating the strategy that he employed
the day before in the short course race, he kicked as the
pair approached the bell and took over the lead, gradually
pulling ahead of Yuda and building up a lead of six seconds
that he held to the line.
Way back behind
the two leaders, the Kenyans turned on the power but were
unable to catch up with Bekele and Yuda, with Wilberforce
Talel finally breaking away from Limo and Kamathi and trailing
over the line 22 seconds behind Yuda.
Bekele later
said that tactical advice from Ethiopian running star Haile
Gebrselassie had helped him: "I met Gebrselassie in Europe
in 2000 and he helped me by talking a lot about race tactics.
I live about 50 kilometres from him near Addis and see him
quite often."
As for his future
plans, Bekele who said that he preferred the 4km race to the
longer course event, said that he planned to run some 3000
metre and 5000 metre races this summer but had no specific
plans.
He returns to
Ethiopia some $65,000 dollars better off than when he arrives
but is as yet undecided as to how he will spend his winnings:
"I will wait until I have the money and then I will see,"
he laughs, "but I might buy a car."
The team competition
was won by Kenya, with Ethiopia 2nd and Morocco
3rd.
Report provided by the IAAF. www.iaaf.org
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