“This was very strange,” she said. “It was so difficult at the start of the race but it got easier and easier. Maybe it was something in my mind. When we had three minutes left I thought ‘Oh, I can make it!’ So I started to sprint. The last few minutes were like a normal competition. I was enjoying it more.”
Despite her record-breaking run in Brussels and her exploits over 13.1 miles over the past two years, she has no immediate plans to move even further up in distance. “I don’t think about the marathon,” she said. “I am more focused on the Tokyo Olympics still if it will be next year. But I am going to focus on Tokyo and more on the track.
“I do think about the half marathon. The marathon will be harder. But this race has given me a lot of confidence. It is not easy to run for an hour.”
Asked if she intended to run at the World Athletics Half Marathon Championships Gdynia 2020 on 17 October, she said: “Yes. That is what I plan to do.”
Farah, sitting next to his friend and training partner Bashir Abdi, said the race had pretty much gone according to their plan. The result being a new mark of 21,330 metres – eclipsing the 2007 mark of 21,285m set by Ethiopia’s Haile Gebrselassie.
Abdi finished eight metres behind, and had earned a world best of his own en route by beating Gebrselassie’s 20,000m mark of 56:26 as he went through as leader in 56:20.2.
Farah said the pair had worked hard on their pacing while preparing for this event at altitude in Font Romeu in the Pyrenees. “It was about staying with the pace, and then if we felt great towards the end of the competition, push on,” he said.
Abdi added: “The first 10,000 metres was more controlled. It was about getting to the second half of the race.”
Farah, whose hour of effort ended very close to where Hassan had come to a halt near the start of the back straight, explained why it took an announcement from the Master of Ceremonies – “The record is yours, Mo!” – to bring him to a halt.
“When I passed the finishing line for the last time I saw I had 24 seconds left, but then I couldn’t see another clock, so I just kept on running to be sure I had done it. I just kept going!” he said.
Farah added that the Wavelight system of differently coloured flashing lights on the inside of the track indicating pacing targets had worked very well for them. “It helped us a lot. Sometimes you get pacemakers who go off too fast. So this system puts them in the right place. And I think that, going forward, it’s great that athletes and spectators have this new option.
“It’s been nice to get back into a competition with all that is going on in the world.
“Records are not easy things to break. It is nice to know you have broken a world record owned by someone who has achieved such a lot in his career.”
When the question was put to Farah about how sure he was of winning and earning the world record, it was answered first, with a grin, by Abdi: “Very sure!”
Farah, who set a world best over two miles indoors back in 2015, responded: “I knew what I had been doing in training and I knew I was capable of beating the record. But doing it in competition is totally different.”