Mo Farah hints at retirement after London Marathon
The four-time Olympic champion will run the London Marathon in October, a month after competing in the Big Half in the capital

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Your support makes all the difference.Sir Mo Farah has cast doubt over his long-term racing future and insisted he will know when to quit.
The four-time Olympic champion will run the London Marathon in October, a month after competing in the Big Half in the capital.
They are his only races left this year after he was beaten by shop assistant Ellis Cross at the Vitality 10k in London in May.
Farah insists he still has the desire to compete but conceded he will only know if he can still match the best after London.
He said: âWhen I line up I always want to do my best, no matter what kind of race it is. Sometimes your body doesnât allow you, I am getting on a bit. Do I still have the hunger, am I willing to put in the work and the miles?
âYes. Iâve been putting in consistent mileage and I still have that fight in me. Until you lose it I donât think I should think about retiring, but being realistic, can your body do this?
âIâve watched tennis and Andy Murray, the guy still has that fight in him but his body doesnât allow him. Iâm not planning four or five races, Iâm planning two races at the minute, then go back and see where I am.
âCan my body compete with these guys at this level? Thatâs the question which will come afterwards.
âI keep putting the miles in and keep putting in the work. I love to be competitive with others, itâs the reason Iâm not going to the World Champs or Europeans.
âIf I canât be competitive with these guys, thereâs no point going and making up the team. Iâll give it my all and see what happens.â
Farah returned from a foot injury to finish second in the Vitality 10k, four seconds behind Cross, in his first race for nine months having failed to reach last yearâs Tokyo Olympics.
Missing the Games, after attempts to qualify in Birmingham and Manchester last summer, has left question marks over his future, but Farah is adamant only he will say when to retire.
âThat decision can only come down from me, not my manager, not my wife or my kids,â said the 39-year-old. âIt has to come down from you. Itâs you putting in the work week in, week out. There will be a time, but I donât even know myself.
âIt is hard. Honestly, if I go back to before the Tokyo Olympics, I was like, âYeah, still got it, still got itâ. But then you get injured and you miss out. You think youâve still got it because thatâs our mind at that level.
âYou donât think anything other than youâve still got it. But sometimes youâve got to take a step back, be realistic and let your body do the work.
âIâm kind of learning, taking my time, taking it easy, piling up the miles and seeing what I can do.â
Farah was never in contention for the World Championships in Oregon, which start next week, having spent years training in the American state at the Nike Oregon Project.
He has six world titles in the 10,000m and 5,000m but knew any dreams of competing were unrealistic.
He added: âIt would have been nice and as an athlete you love to compete but, again, youâve got to be realistic. Youâve done the World Champs, youâve won medals, are you just going there to make numbers or are you going there to actually be competitive? Itâs not easy.
âYouâve got to be competitive enough to compete the last 1k in under 2:25. Am I capable of that? Anyone can run 27 minutes, but can you run 26.40, 26.35? I think thatâs what itâs going to take to win World Champs.â
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