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Mo Farah accuses rival Andrew Vernon of not regarding him as British

OZGOD

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These nationalism debates always crop up now and then eh. First Arrigo Sacchi saying that too many blacks and foreigners playing for Italy in the football (nevermind that they are Italian citizens) then now you have Mo Farah not being considered British because presumably he was born in Somalia.

I guess this problem crops up more often in countries where there is a lot of immigration and there is a melting pot of people from different parts of the world, like England, Australia, the US, Canada, and to a lesser extent parts of Western Europe which have a lot of African and East European immigration. You don't often hear these debates in places like India or Pakistan where there's not a lot of immigration (other than regional immigration from neighbouring countries). You don't really hear about them in China or Japan or South East Asia. It's usually places like the ones I mentioned earlier, where people will say "but he's not Australian, he's from Russia" or "he's not American he's from Mexico" or "he's not British, he's South African".

So what constitutes being a "true national" to you? Is merely being a citizen not enough these days?

Mo Farah has accused his team-mate Andy Vernon of not regarding him as British, following their row on Twitter this week. Farah claimed that the bad blood between the pair has festered since last year’s European Championships, following a comment Vernon made when the pair were celebrating after finishing first and second respectively in the 10,000m.

“We were sitting down together with a number of staff and athletes,” said Farah, who moved from Somalia to Britain when he was nine. “One comment he made, which I didn’t really like, was to say that he should have won the gold. I was like: ‘What, the gold should have been given to you?’ And I was like: ‘Because he was the only European guy?’

“You can’t say something like that. I was just kind of biting my tongue at the time.”

But Vernon, while admitting a conversation between the pair had taken place in Zurich, said that Farah had made an “outrageous misrepresentation of the chat” they had – and that he was sorry for any offence caused.

“What I did say was complete tongue-in-cheek,” said Vernon. “I said: ‘I’m European champion.’ That was it. I don’t discard him as British – it’s complete lies. His management team have been very snide at making me out to be a bad guy. He laughed at the time. If he did take it out of context, it wasn’t meant that way and I apologise.”

“I’ve known Mo for 12 years. We weren’t best of friends but we were pals. I was delighted when we finished first and second in the 10,000m and I celebrated with him. There’s nothing more I would like right now than a two-way press conference when we can discus what happened because what he said is not what I said. He has played the cheap shot. He has played the card. I don’t know what I can do.”

Vernon also claimed that Farah’s tweets on Tuesday night to him had been sent by a third party, adding: “I don’t think he is that kind of person. His Twitter account is managed by someone else, that’s common knowledge.”

Meanwhile Farah has admitted that his tweets, during which he branded his rival “an embarrassment” who had not won anything “decent”, should not have been sent. “I do apologise,” he said. “I shouldn’t have reacted that way. We do have some history in the past, me and Andy. In terms of making it public, that was never the right thing to do. My frustration just got the better of me.

“But with an athlete like him, one I’ve been on the podium with, it was difficult to bite my tongue,” he said. “I couldn’t do it. Andy has a history of disrespecting athletes. You know, me and Andy, we’re not best friends, we’ll never be best friends. That’s just how it is. I just have to concentrate on my running and do what I have to do.”

http://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ernon-athletics-european-championships-zurich
 
That's terrible!

Mo Farah is as British as any other immigrant - he should not be made to feel like that
 
No one except Vernon knows what he really meant.

Sure it could have been a classless, bitter comment with racist undertones or it could have just been a light hearted Kevin Pietersen/Jonathan Trott 'you're not really' English type comment which is made on this very website hundreds of times.
 
born in mogadishu

just how much more british can you get?
 
born in mogadishu

just how much more british can you get?

Born overseas - check
British citizen - check
Represents Britain in sport - check

Yep he's definitely British.

I think he's a bit different to poached sportsmen who get fast tracked to citizenship just to compete for their adopted country in the Olympics or w/e. Like Australia gave citizenship to some Romanian weightlifters a few years ago so they could compete in the Olympics...they didn't even speak English and didn't live in Australia. I think Mo has lived in the UK since he was 8?
 
More controversy for Farah:

http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/athletics/31720589

A banned athlete is being investigated by his sport's world governing body after posting pictures on Facebook of him training with Mo Farah.
Hamza Driouch, 20, was photographed running with Britain's Olympic and world 5,000m and 10,000m champion at a camp in Ethiopia earlier this year.

However, the Qatari is barred from taking part in training camps.

He was suspended from athletics until December 2016 for biological passport irregularities.

Driouch, who will be ineligible for next year's Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, competed in the 1500m at London 2012 but failed to make the final. He won the event at the World Junior Championships in 2012.
 
Four-time Olympic champion Mo Farah and Haile Gebrselassie are involved in a dispute over an alleged theft at a hotel belonging to the Ethiopian athletics great in Addis Ababa.

The Briton said he had money, a watch and two phones taken from his room, and that Gebrselassie did not help him.

"I was just disappointed with Haile," said 36-year-old Farah.

Gebrselassie, 46, responded by accusing Farah of "blackmail" and "defaming" his reputation and business.

Farah made the claims at the media preview event of Sunday's London Marathon.

"Just to be honest, it's Haile who owns the hotel and when you stay for three months in that hotel, it was very disappointing to know that someone who has that hotel and that kind of support couldn't do nothing," said Farah, who had been training in Ethiopia.

Gebrselassie accuses Farah of 'disgraceful conduct'
Farah alleged that the items were stolen on 23 March.

In a statement sent to BBC Sport via his agent, double Olympic 10,000m champion Gebrselassie said he was considering taking legal action against Farah.

He said a text message he received from Farah before the London Marathon news conference was an attempt to "blackmail" him.

Gebrselassie said guests staying at his hotel are asked to declare if they are carrying more than $350 (£271) in cash, so they could be given the option of keeping the money in a safe box or give it to officials for safe-keeping.

He claimed that Farah chose to hold on to his money, which meant his hotel was not legally accountable for it.

Gebrselassie said the alleged theft was reported and that five of the hotel's employees were investigated but released without charge, adding that police "found nothing on the reported robbery case".

Gebrselassie, who won four world titles, said Farah was given a 50% discount on his hotel rates, but left without paying his service bill of 81,000 Ethiopian Birr (£2,170).

He also said his hotel staff reported "disgraceful conduct" by Farah and his entourage and that he was reported to the police for "attacking a married athlete in the gym".

Gebrselassie said a criminal charge was dropped because of his own mediation role.

'Farah wants matter resolved'
In response to Gebrselassie's claims, a spokesperson for Farah said: "Mo is disappointed with this statement and the continued reluctance by the hotel and its owner to take responsibility for this robbery.

"Mo disputes all of these claims, which are an effort to distract from the situation, where members of his hotel staff used a room key and stole money and items from Mo Farah's room (there was no safe as it was faulty, and Mo requested a new one).

"Police reports confirm the incident and the hotel admitted responsibility and were in contact with Mo's legal advisor.

"The hotel even offered to pay Mo the amount stolen, only to withdraw the offer when he prematurely left the hotel and moved to other accommodation due to security concerns.

"Despite many attempts to discuss this issue privately with Mr Gebrselassie, he did not respond but now that he has, we would welcome him or his legal team getting in touch so that this matter can be resolved."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/48044579
 
Four-time Olympic champion Mo Farah was involved in an altercation at Haile Gebrselassie's hotel but was the victim of an attack, his coach says.

Farah and Gebrselassie are involved in a dispute over an alleged theft at a hotel belonging to the Ethiopian athletics great in Addis Ababa.

On Thursday, Gebrselassie said Farah "punched and kicked" a husband and wife during the Briton's stay this year.

Farah's coach Gary Lough said he was acting in self-defence.

Gebrselassie made further claims on Thursday that his falling out with Farah stems from when he would not allow Jama Aden, a coach who was arrested as part of an anti-doping operation in Spain in 2016, to enter the hotel.

A spokesperson for Farah said Aden "has never trained Mo" and that the allegation had "no basis" and is "not true".

The alleged altercation
Lough, who was present during the incident, told the Evening Standard that a man had approached Farah, 36, and his training partner Abi Bashir in the gym and that Farah had been threatened with dumbbells.

"I turn round and this guy comes over threateningly as if he's going to attack Bashir and Mo tries to defend Bashir and hits the other guy," said Lough.

"So, they're grappling a little bit and the woman comes running and Mo turns round not knowing who it is and she got hit on the arm.

"She had two 5kg weights in her hands and was threatening to throw them at him.

"So I shout, 'Put those things down or you'll be in jail.' Hotel security did nothing."

On Wednesday, at a media preview event for Sunday's London Marathon, Farah said that he had money, a watch and two phones taken from his room on 23 March.

He added that he was "disappointed" that Gebrselassie "couldn't do nothing" to help retrieve his items.

Gebrselassie, 46, responded in a statement on Wednesday, accusing Farah of "blackmail" and "defaming" his reputation and business.

The two-time Olympic 10,000m champion said the alleged theft was reported and that five of the hotel's employees were investigated but released without charge after three weeks in custody, adding that police "found nothing on the reported robbery case".

Gebrselassie also claimed that hotel staff reported "disgraceful conduct" by Farah and his entourage and that he was reported to the police for "attacking a married athlete in the gym".

He said a criminal charge was dropped because of his own mediation role.

On Thursday, Gebrselassie told The Guardian that Farah had confronted the man.

"Farah said to him, 'Why are you following me?' But the guy said he wasn't - and that he was just doing his work," said Gebrselassie.

"Immediately Farah punched them and kicked them by foot. Especially the husband. There were lots of witnesses."

However, Ethiopian Sisay Tsegaye said that he and his wife were involved in the altercation with Farah but that the Briton did not hit his wife and they had now "found peace".

"A brawl erupted inside the gym," said Tsegaye.

"I think Mo was thinking I was using his training regime to train other people. But in fact we were using videos downloaded from YouTube.

"When a brawl erupted, Mo kicked me around my neck. It was a minor hit. This caused disturbance inside the gym. Police came to the scene but it was resolved with mediation. But he never touched my wife.

"Now I'm on good terms with Mo. We have found peace four days after this incident."

Gebrselassie, who won four world titles, also said Farah was given a 50% discount on his hotel rates, but left without paying his service bill of 81,000 Ethiopian Birr (£2,170).

In response to Gebrselassie's claims on Wednesday, a spokesperson for Farah said: "Mo is disappointed with this statement and the continued reluctance by the hotel and its owner to take responsibility for this robbery.

"Mo disputes all of these claims, which are an effort to distract from the situation, where members of his hotel staff used a room key and stole money and items from Mo Farah's room (there was no safe as it was faulty, and Mo requested a new one).

"Police reports confirm the incident and the hotel admitted responsibility and were in contact with Mo's legal advisor.

"The hotel even offered to pay Mo the amount stolen, only to withdraw the offer when he prematurely left the hotel and moved to other accommodation due to security concerns.

"Despite many attempts to discuss this issue privately with Mr Gebrselassie, he did not respond but now that he has, we would welcome him or his legal team getting in touch so that this matter can be resolved."

Jama Aden claims
Gebrselassie claimed on Thursday he had previously refused Aden entry to the hotel, leading to a dispute with Farah.

Aden, the former coach of 2015 world 1500m champion Genzebe Dibaba, was arrested after police raided his hotel room in Sabadell, north of Barcelona in June 2016. The investigation is ongoing.

"His grudge against me started when I denied access to Jama Aden to the hotel and forbidden access," Gebrselassie told the Telegraph.

"I was head of the Ethiopian Athletics Federation at the time. He was angry with me at the time and looking for ways to revenge for that."

Gebrselassie was Ethiopian Athletics Federation president between November 2016 and November 2018.

In 2016, British Athletics said Aden had been "unofficial facilitator" for Farah when he trained in Ethiopia for a week in 2015 and had only called out lap times for the Briton.

"To be clear Jama Aden has never trained Mo and this allegation along with many of the others levied by Haile Gerbreselassie and his hotel employees today have no basis and are not true," said a spokesperson for Farah on Thursday.

Former 1500m world champion and BBC commentator Steve Cram said it is "an unseemly spat" between Farah and Gebrselassie but that it would not affect the Briton in his bid to win the London Marathon on Sunday.

"Mo had something he really wanted to get off his chest," said Cram.

"He knew he had an audience and decided it was the right time to say what he said about what had happened in Ethiopia.

"It might not have been the best timing but he felt it was the platform to do it."

Cram said he was hopeful that the "two great champions" could "settle their differences in whatever way and the thing doesn't escalate".

"Inevitably for the media it's a great story," he added.

"It is a distraction from the weekend - we're all getting excited about Mo versus Eliud Kipchoge - another great champion, so I hope by Sunday that's what we'll concentrate on."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/48058601
 
Alberto Salazar - Mo Farah's former athletics coach - has been banned from the sport for four years after being found guilty of doping violations.

Salazar, 61, runs the Nike Oregon Project - home to four-time Olympic champion Farah from 2011 until 2017.

The decision follows a four-year investigation by the US Anti Doping Agency (Usada) and a two-year court battle behind closed doors.

The investigation began after a BBC Panorama programme in 2015.

The programme, a joint investigation with the US website ProPublica, revealed allegations of doping and unethical practices at the US training base in Beaverton, Oregon.

The UK sports governing body UK Athletics conducted its own review into the claims, and gave Briton Farah - also a six-time world champion - the green light to continue working with American Salazar.

Dr Jeffrey Brown, a Nike-paid endocrinologist who treated many of Salazar's athletes, has also been banned for four years.

The BBC can now reveal that doping charges against Salazar, who was born in Cuba, and Dr Brown were brought by Usada in March 2017. The pair contested the charges, supported by Nike-paid lawyers, and the case went to the American Arbitrators Association. It is expected Usada will make a statement shortly.

Farah announced he was leaving Salazar in October 2017 but denied his decision was to do with the doping claims.

Salazar, Nike, UKA and Salazar have been contacted for comment.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49882757
 
One of the greatest distance runners of all time.

Shame that these off-field controversies have been following him around recently.
 
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