HENGELO (Netherlands), May 27: Haile Gebrselassie made a low-key return to track athletics on Saturday when he finished fifth in the 10,000 metres at the 25th Fanny Blanker-Koen Games in Hengelo.
The 34-year-old Ethiopian double Olympic champion, who dominated distance running in the late 1990s and set world records on the same Henglo track, was edging his way back after switching to marathons after the 2004 Olympics.
Gebrselassie kept up with the leading group of six runners but lacked his trademark finishing speed on the final lap and finished 26 minutes, 54 seconds, six seconds behind compatriot Sileshi Sihine, who won in 26.48.
Gebrselassie registered four world records on the Dutch track between 1994 and 1998.
Meanwhile, Jeremy Wariner of the United States won the 400 metres in a stadium record 44.43 seconds.
The Olympic and world champion held off a strong challenge from Gary Kikaya, opening a lead in the final turn and then extending it in the final 50 metres. Kikaya finished second in 44.77, followed by Darold Williamson of the United States in 45.37. Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele won the two-mile (3,219-metre) race with a blistering sprint that put him more than 20 yards (metres) ahead of the other front runners, who had been close until the final lap.
The distance, which is seldom run, was scheduled partly to give Bekele an attempt at the world record. He called off those plans after a string of poor performances in recent months, which he said were due in part to an undetected knee injury.
He finished in eight minutes, 13.51 seconds, more than three seconds ahead of his nearest challenger but far behind Daniel Kipngetich's 1997 world record time of 7:58.61.