FEATURE: The greatest 10 000m of all time between Ethiopia and Kenya

The greatest 10 000m of all time – ’Geb v Tergat

Ethiopian Haile Gebrselassie
File pic. Ethiopian Haile Gebrselassie during a press conference. Picture credit: Bob Ramsak

JOHANNESBURG, April 19 (ANA) – As the Tokyo Olympics in July draws ever closer, it has been almost 21 years since one of the greatest 10 000m races of all time – which saw a battle between legendary rivals Haile Gebrselassie of Ethiopia and Kenyan Paul Tergat.

On September 25, 2000, the Stadium Australia was packed with 112.524 spectators. Most were still basking in the afterglow of local Cathy Freeman’s gold medal in the 400m as the field lined up for the men’s 10,000m final.

Few had left. There were nine gold medals decided that night, the Magic Monday of the Sydney Olympic Games. There was no divine ruling that each of the nine finals had to be a cracker: they just were.

The men’s 10,000 final – there were still heats of the ‘10’, in those days – was seen to be about two men: Gebrselassie and Tergat. And, a corollary to that, it was about what tactics Tergat, as perennial a second place-finisher to ‘Geb’, would adopt.

What would Tergat do? For the longest time, it seemed the answer would be: “nothing”. Then, along the final back-straight coming up to 250 metres from home, Tergat played his trump card.

In five years of unbroken victories over Tergat and all others, Gebrselassie’s finishing speed had been the decisive factor. Now, at his last chance to take an Olympic victory over his toughest rival, Tergat decided to play to Gebrselassie’s greatest strength. What sort of madness was this, 100,000 people wondered at once.

The doubters were ultimately shown to be right. Of course, Tergat, an athlete who had looked to be a comparative plodder as Gebrselassie blew past him at three previous World Championships and in the Atlanta 1996 Olympic final, was mad to think he could now out-sprint him.

Mad, maybe, but also cunning like a fox: not until the final 20 metres did Gebrselassie draw level with Tergat. Not until the final 10 did he edge ever-so-slightly ahead. Not until the final line had he won. The margin was 0.09 seconds – the closest of all their titanic battles.

It was a narrower margin than the men’s 100m final at the same Games (0.12). Indeed, of the Sydney Games’ 12 track events raced over one lap or less – where winning margins of centimetres are more commonly found – only three produced a closer finish.

Tergat had tried everything to beat Gebrselassie. Everything else had failed. This was not madness, though it may have been an inspired act of desperation. How could it be mad? Tergat’s tactics in Sydney took him closer to success than any others he had employed in four major championship finals.

Out of nothing, Tergat almost created something very big.

The rivalry between Tergat and Gebrselassie was a rare one. It spanned 14 years, from 1993, when Gebrselassie finished three places ahead of Tergat at the World Cross Country Championships in Amorebieta, until the 2007 London Marathon when they lined up alongside each other for the last time with Tergat eventually placing sixth and Gebrselassie recording a ‘DNF’.

Even in this professional era, it’s rare to find other examples of two athletes who have dominated an event – in this case, the 10,000m – for so long. Others intruded at times – 1992 Olympic champion Khalid Skah finished between the pair at the 1995 World Championships – but it was almost invariably Tergat and Gebrselassie fighting it out at the end of the ‘ten’.

Fittingly, given the pre-eminence of the Olympic Games in public perception, Atlanta and Sydney were the high points. Atlanta was a battle fought in sweltering heat and humidity over the final 5000m; the greatness of the Sydney race, by contrast, crept up on spectators until its surprising and amazing final crescendo.

The rivalry, however, was coming to an end. Tergat had already made public his intention to move up to the marathon.

Both protagonists seemed to be showing the first signs of running mortality. Tergat had to convince the Kenyan selectors he should run the 10,000m rather than the 5000m. It took a 27:03.87 which, poignantly, remained the year’s fastest, to win the argument. “I wanted to prove I’m worthy of representing my country in this event,” he said post-race.

Gebrselassie, who struggled to overcome an achilles injury to get to the line, had to dig deep, perhaps deeper than he had ever gone and ever would again, to get past his rival.

Few in Stadium Australia that night would have thought Tergat could win. Of those few, hardly any would have suggested he try to out-sprint him.

The up-ending of our usual perceptions by Tergat’s going against type provided a tantalising element of surprise similar, to draw an example from another sport, to when Muhammad Ali, on his way to a famous upset victory, absorbed a pummelling against the ropes in conning George Foreman to punch himself out in the famous ‘Rumble in the Jungle’ heavyweight title fight.

Across the finish line, surprise and relief were etched on Gebrselassie’s face; despair, perhaps tempered by the satisfaction that he had now tried everything, on Tergat’s.

The pair shared a brief embrace, the respect almost palpable. They would never meet on a track again, but the two greatest of their generation brought down the curtain on their era with a tour de force.- African News Agency (ANA), Editing by Michael Sherman