London 2012 Olympics: David Rudisha is the star of Games, says Seb Coe

Forget Bolt and GB's golden girls, Rudisha is the star of London Games, says Coe

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UPDATED:

20:53 GMT, 10 August 2012

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Seb Coe sat down with a
bowl of porridge on Friday
morning and spoke with a
croaky voice after all the
speeches and briefings he
has made over the last few weeks.

But what he said resonated because his
was the verdict of one of the greatest middle distance
runners in history acclaiming
another.

'Bolt was good,' he said. 'Rudisha was
magnificent. That is quite a big call but it was
the most extraordinary piece of running I
have probably ever seen. It was the
performance of the Games, not just of track
and field, but of the Games.'

A class apart: Kenya's David Rudisha celebrates after winning the men's 800m final in the Olympic Stadium

A class apart: Kenya's David Rudisha celebrates after winning the men's 800m final in the Olympic Stadium

Record breaker: Rudisha beat his own world record in becoming Olympic champion in London

Record breaker: Rudisha beat his own world record in becoming Olympic champion in London

David Rudisha, a Kenyan, was already a legend in athletics but little known to the man in Regent Street until he broke his own 800 metres world record on Thursday night to win a gold of utter certainty.

He won his race from the front. He did not get involved in a race but moved well ahead over the last 600m with smooth, majestic strides. It was a one-man pulverisation in the fastest 800m race from first to last place ever run.

Without pace-makers he ran 1min 40.91sec, precisely a 10th of a second better than his previous best. The crowd roared approval. They knew they had seen something special – the first sub 1min 41sec time in history.

Coe, twice 800m world recordholder, said: 'He had the balls to go in there and think, “I am so much better than anyone else”, so that he could do that. In Olympic finals you are not supposed to gamble with the till, but he did.

'It comes from consummate physical
and mental confidence. If you look
at the field that is arguably the greatest
800m ever run.

'If you had said to Andrew Osagie (of
Britain) 18 months ago, “You will get to
an Olympic final and you are
going to run 1min 43sec”, he
would have taken that.
Whether he would have
thought he was going to
finish last is another
thing.

'The last person that
I saw grip a middledistance
event in an
Olympic Games was
Herb Elliott back in 1960.
This was even tougher.'

Flying the flag: Rudisha is a national hero back home in Kenya

Flying the flag: Rudisha is a national hero back home in Kenya

What's the time Rudisha points to the clock after beating his own 800m world record

What's the time Rudisha points to the clock after beating his own 800m world record

Rudisha is a member of
a Masai tribe in the Trans
Mara region of the Rift
Valley, where he is a High
Masai Moran, or community
leader.

The Masai tribe used to fight
to take cattle off neighbouring communities. Now Rudisha fights for them on a bigger, different stage. His reward when he first broke the 800m world record in 2010 was a feast. He was blessed by his elders. Five thousand people and 1,000 bulls attended.

He was given a spear, a fur coat and ceremonial beads.

For all the rituals of his homeland – he now lives in the Eldorat, western Kenya – it is YouTube videos of the man he calls Mr Coe that form a centrepiece of his athletics ambitions.

In the space of six years Rudisha has gone from a high-school talent into a world leader. The transformation has been overseen by a 63-year-old Irish missionary who watched Rudisha's run in London on a television set back in Kenya.

Brother Colm O'Connell, from Cork, arrived
at St Patrick's High School, Iten, as a geography
teacher in 1976. He learned about middle
and long-distance training from Pete Foster,
a fellow teacher and brother of Brendan
Foster, who won the 10,000m bronze at the
Montreal Olympics in the very month he
arrived in Africa. Brother Colm is now the
most successful track coach in the world.

Rudisha, world champion last year, is
confident but without the braggadocio of
Bolt. Coe said: 'I have known David a long
time and I have seen two of his world records
and he is a lovely guy. He is incredibly nice,
incredibly modest and just the real deal. He's
the greatest 800m runner of all time.

Plenty to spare: Rudisha (left) heads towards the finishing line unchallenged after his great run

Plenty to spare: Rudisha (left) heads towards the finishing line unchallenged after his great run

'Profile doesn't bother him. He is just
entirely focused on running. We have the
Muhammad Ali of track and field in Usain,
but we have to make sure the other sterling
talents in track and field are recognised.

'Some of these guys are coming out of
federations with hand-to-mouth existence,
not marketing budgets, language and
media skills.

'I have known him for three years and we
have talked about how he would break the
world record. I said I thought the best thing
was to commit early rather than trying to
pull it back on the second lap. I think I was
proved right in that.

'I am pleased we got a world record at the
Games and especially pleased because it was
definitive. It wasn't a couple of millimetres in
a pole vault. He put his imprimatur on it.

'We exchanged messages before the
race. I wished him good luck and he was
very generous.'

Rudisha phoned Brother Colm
yesterday morning before facing the press
on a stool in Westfield shopping centre.
He talked of his respect for his father,
Daniel, who won a silver medal in the
4x400m relay at the 1968 Olympics
and, of course, 'Mr Coe', whom he
first met in Oslo in 2010.

'He told me then he had seen
something special and that I
could break the world record,'
said Rudisha, who began
running barefoot in a
country with just two
tracks. There was no smart
gym for him to use.

'Mr Coe invited me to go through
the Olympic Park in February. It was a
privilege and an honour. So many
athletes didn't get that opportunity. I
said I would work hard to make him
proud. I hope I have succeeded.'
Judging by Mr Coe's comments, he has
succeeded on every level.

DAVID RUDISHA GRAPHIC

Liverpool chief Ian Ayre hits out at Dave Whelan

Liverpool chief Ayre laughs off Whelan's claim that Martinez was offered Anfield hot seat

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UPDATED:

10:52 GMT, 5 June 2012

Ian Ayre took a swipe at Wigan owner Dave Whelan as he defended Liverpool's handling of Brendan Rodgers' appointment as manager.

The Reds lured Rodgers from Swansea after an exhaustive search which included talking to Wigan boss Roberto Martinez.

Liverpool FC's Commercial Director Ian Ayre

Wigan Chairman Dave Whelan

Difference of opinion: Ian Ayre (left) and Dave Whelan (right)

Whelan said Martinez was offered the Anfield job but Ayre, Liverpool's managing director, dismissed the claim and insisted Rodgers was always their first choice.

'Our aim from the outset was to conduct a proper, thorough, search, and do it in the proper manner,' he told the Liverpool Echo.

'From our point of view, we did all the right things. We approached the clubs we needed to approach, and conducted ourselves properly at all times.

'It is disappointing, then, that Dave Whelan felt the need to run the kind of sideshow he conducted via Sky Sports News and various other media outlets.

Hot seat: Brendan Rodgers beat Roberto Martinez to the Anfield job

Hot seat: Brendan Rodgers beat Roberto Martinez to the Anfield job

'To be honest, I always thought John Bishop was the biggest comedian in the north west, but Dave Whelan seems to have taken that mantle over the last couple of weeks!

'It is important to understand that we ran a proper search to find a new manager, and that part of that involved us speaking to a number of candidates.

'We make no secret of the fact we spoke with Roberto Martinez, but that is all we did. He is a great guy, and I can't speak highly enough of his professionalism and conduct.

'But for his chairman to make suggestions like he has, and suggestions that just aren't true, well it is disappointing to say the least. We can say with absolute certainty that the only person who was made any offer by Liverpool Football Club is Brendan Rodgers.'

Brian Kennedy: Rangers must accept Blue Knights" offer for Friday

Take it or leave it! Kennedy hands Rangers Friday deadline for Blue Knights' offer

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UPDATED:

08:08 GMT, 11 May 2012

Sale Sharks owner Brian Kennedy has warned Rangers' administrators they must accept the Blue Knights' offer for the club on Friday or they will walk away.

Kennedy has reportedly struck a deal with Craig Whyte to acquire his 85 per cent shareholding and will now push Duff and Phelps to name a bidder.

Saga continues: Crisis club Rangers are still yet to finalise a takeover deal

Saga continues: Crisis club Rangers are still yet to finalise a takeover deal

The Blue Knights were previously offered preferred bidder status but former partners Ticketus would not pay the exclusivity fee and they were then beaten by Bill Miller, who withdrew on Tuesday.

Kennedy told the Daily Record they were now at the 'end of the road'.

'If
our bid is not accepted in the next few hours then, most reluctantly,
we will have to withdraw from the process by lunchtime,' he said. 'Let
me be absolutely clear. This is not brinkmanship or an empty threat.

'We
have a plan to save this club but my lawyers, Walker Morris, have
advised me it will not be possible to execute a CVA unless, on Saturday
morning, we begin working, full-time and flat out on due diligence and
documentation.

Ultimatum: Sale Sharks owner Brian Kennedy

Ultimatum: Sale Sharks owner Brian Kennedy

'Any later than that and our plan cannot be delivered with any legal certainty.

'For that reason we'll be forced to withdraw our offer today and neither I nor any member of the Blue Knights consortium will be left as the last man standing.'

Duff and Phelps last night announced Whyte had struck a deal with two groups, with one understood to be a group with experience of running clubs in the top two levels of English football.

Joint administrator Paul Clark said: 'We have continued discussions today with the parties remaining in the bidding process and good progress has been made.

'We can also confirm that Craig Whyte has confirmed that he will transfer his shareholding in Rangers Football Club to two of the parties and has indicated he would not be an impediment to a sale of the club.

'We will issue a further update for supporters and can say that every effort is being made to conclude the sale of the club as quickly as possible.'

According to Duff and Phelps, three potential ownership groups emerged in the wake of Miller's withdrawal to rival the Blue Knights, whose offer was conditional on acquiring Whyte's 85 per cent shareholding.

Like the Knights, the English-based consortium are understood to favour exiting administration through a Company Voluntary Arrangement.