By James Magayi @magayijim

Asbel Kiprop brought the 50th anniversary running of the Exxon Mobil Bislett Games to a rousing conclusion at the IAAF Diamond League meeting in Oslo on Thursday as he earned his fourth win in four Dream Miles on this track.

“It feels like home here,” said the 2008 Olympic and two-time world 1,500m champion, who sprinted home in 3:51.45 ahead of the fellow Kenyan who finished last year as world leader, Silas Kiplagat, in a race where an early attempt to get away by Djibouti’s Ayanleh Souleiman was frustrated. “It was my fourth time here and my fourth win, which is excellent for me.

“I knew Souleiman asked for a very fast pace, but for the rest it was too fast and going into the last lap we were nearly all together. “At that time I was thinking there is a good chance I can win again at Bislett,” Souleiman who went with the pacing pair and then attempted to put some distance between him and the rest of the field, getting 20 metres clear.

But by the bell, Kiplagat had towed the opposition back to his shoulder, and the Djiboutian athlete was eventually passed by three men in the final straight. He showed his frustration afterwards by punching his fist into the track before rising and putting his head in his hands.

Kiprop held off the challenge of his shorter compatriot, who finished in a season’s best of 3:51.72, and there was joy for another unexpected high performer – something of the theme for the night – as Pieter-Jan Hannes of Belgium took third place in a national record of 3:51.84 before producing a punch in the air which signalled delight rather than despair.

Genzebe Dibaba’s pursuit of the seven-year-old world 5,000m record set by her sister is going to have to be continued. The 24-year-old younger sibling had been bold in announcing she would seek to better the mark of 14:11.15 her elder sister Tirunesh had set on this very track a short while before completing the 5,000m and 10,000m double at the Beijing Olympics.

As the second of the two pacemakers stepped off the track, Dibaba briefly had the stooping figure of her fellow Ethiopian Senbere Teferi in front of her, but soon she was striding out on her own, a lone figure for the latter part of the race.

But the longer the race went on, with the flags on the rim of the cooling stadium testifying to the swirling elements around her, the steeper Dibaba’s task appeared.

Courtesy of mediamaxnetwork.co.ke

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