British athletics legend Mo Farah began the day taking a lap of honour in an open top Bentley and ended it by giving the crowd what they wanted in his final race on home turf - a victory. The 34-year-old, who had agonisingly fallen just short of a third successive distance world double in London last Saturday taking silver in the 5,000 metres, cruised home in the 3,000m at the Birmingham Diamond League meeting.
Despite his presence the meeting was not a sell out. For a final time in Britain - he runs in Zurich on Wednesday before embarking on a road running career - Farah knelt to the ground and kissed the track before adorning himself bare-chested with the Union Jack flag. "It's been an amazing week," said Farah. "I have been tired but had a little downtime with family.
"Emotion was high, not as high as London but it was the last time at home. "While I was racing I was just trying to think about race and who was there. "It means everything to me to be four times Olympic champion (2012/16 doubles) it is all I dreamt of as a youngster was running for Britain," added Farah, who came to Britain aged eight with his mother and two of his brothers form war-torn Somalia. "A hobby has become a job which is what you want. Going to the road will be a new game and a new mindset, I am excited." Jamaica's double Olympic individual sprint champion Elaine Thompson put behind her a disappointing performance in the 100m world final to win the event in 10.93sec.
"It was important to pick myself up and come back," she said. Thompson's bitter rival Dafne Schippers, the 200m world champion in London, finished down the field. There was to be frustration for Adam Gemili in the men's 100m - an all British affair - as the man credited with running the decisive leg in their epic 4x100m relay world victory was disqualified for a false start.