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    How fast does Mo Farah run, what are the I’m A Celebrity star’s world records and what is his net worth?

    SIR MO FARAH is heading into the Welsh Castle as a campmate on I’m A Celebrity.
    The double double Olympic gold medallist is a self-confessed fan of the show, and is said to be have been inspired by sprint star Linford Christie to enter.

    Mo Farah is taking part in I’m A Celebrity 2020
    How fast does Mo Farah run?

    Farah, 37, was born in Somalia and moved to Britain at the age of eight.
    The running superstar won gold in the 5km and 10km at both the 2012 and 2016 Olympic Games.
    His personal best over 5km is 12mins 53.11secs, recorded in Monaco in 2011.
    While Sir Mo’s best 10km (6.2miles) time is 26mins 46.57secs, also recorded in 2011.

    He is the British record holder in both events as well as in the 3,000 metres, 7mins 32.62secs, and two miles, 8mins 7.85secs.
    Sir Mo is British and European record holder over 1500metres with a time of 3mins 28.81secs.
    In September 2020 he broke the world record for a 1 hour run – clocking in 21,330 metres (13.25 miles).
    Over the course of a marathon (26.2miles), his best time is 2hour 5min 11secs, set in Chicago in 2018.

    He hopes to defend his 10,000metres title at the rescheduled Olympics in Tokyo 2021
    What is his net worth?
    Farah has a net worth of approximately £4million.
    In 2013 Farah was awarded a CBE in the New Year Honours list for services to athletics.
    He was knighted by the Queen in the 2017 New Year Honours.

    Mo Farah’s 10,000m Olympic gold at London 2012Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    When does I’m A Celebrity start on ITV?
    I’m A Celebrity now has a confirmed start date of THIS SUNDAY (November 15, 2020) at 9pm on ITV.
    I’m A Celebrity is on every night at 9pm for around three weeks, with the exact date of the final yet to be revealed.
    You can catch up with any episodes you miss on the ITV Hub.

    Who is in the I’m A Celebrity 2020 line-up?
    The show will see 10 celebrities taking part including Farah.
    He’s hoping to be crowned Knight and King of the Castle.
    The Sun started revealing who would be on the show back in September 2020.
    Here’s who has been officially confirmed to be taking part:

    I’m A Celebrity reveals 2020’s stars in warm new outfits as Jessica Plummer and co head to Wales More

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    Fans at Tokyo Olympics 2020 set to be banned from cheering or ‘talking in a loud voice’, reveals chief

    SPECTATORS at next summer’s Olympics in Tokyo may be told to keep quiet for fear of spreading coronavirus.
    Some evidence suggests the pandemic can be spread by shouting or talking in crowded spaces, an area of concern for sports welcoming rowdy fans back to stadiums.

    Socially distanced fans at a Japanese football game clap their team during a matchCredit: Getty Images – Getty

    Measures are being put in place for the eventual start of the delayed Olympics, with July 2021 earmarked.
    And Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro Muto has refused to rule out the possibility of silencing crowds.
    He told reporters: “There’s a possibility that we may ask the spectators to refrain from shouting and speaking in a loud voice.
    “When we think of the impact, we believe it is an item for consideration, to reduce the risk of airborne droplets.

    “But we haven’t reached a conclusion.”
    Crowds have steadily returned to sporting events around the world although a second wave in Europe has ended pilot schemes in countries such as Germany and the United Kingdom.

    The potential for a vaccine or mass-testing to be in place by the summer will be seen as cause for optimism for the Olympics.
    But Tokyo organisers are not promising a return to normal for the Games, with fans arriving from abroad potentially having to quarantine before entering stadiums.

    In addition, thousands of seats may go unsold to enforce social distancing despite the financial strain surrounding Tokyo’s Olympics.
    Muto added: “Regarding spectators from overseas, whether they need to go through a 14-day quarantine or not, whether we can waive that or not will depend on the situation.

    Whether we are going to have full capacity or not, the decision has not been made yet.
    Toshiro Muto

    “There is a possibility this quarantine is waived if they meet certain conditions.
    “The spectators’ anxiety of not knowing if they can actually go to the games or not is understandable.
    “We would like to be considerate of the spectators as much as possible while we take preventive measures at the same time to be able to accommodate as many spectators as possible.
    “Whether we are going to have full capacity or not, the decision has not been made yet because various experiments are taking place.”

    Olympics postponed as Tokyo 2020 is latest sporting event crushed by coronavirus and pushed back until 2021 More

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    Chris Smith dead at 43: Team GB star leaves behind wife and two kids after going for run in Scottish hills

    TEAM GB runner Chris Smith has tragically been confirmed dead after his body was found near a 3,700ft mountain.
    Emergency services were called on Tuesday evening after Smith, 43, did not return home from an afternoon run in the Perthshire hills.

    Tributes have flooded in for mountain runner Chris Smith (centre, right)Credit: Twitter / @smithcj_5

    Tayside Mountain Rescue Team, police and a Coastguard helicopter were deployed to find Smith, who had been on holiday with wife Lindsay and two children.
    On Thursday morning, a search-and-rescue team discovered a body near the 3,700ft Meall Garbh, Glenlyon, pending formal identification.
    A statement on behalf of the family has since confirmed the death.
    It read: “On behalf of our entire family, we are devastated to let you know that Chris has lost his life in Glen Lyon.

    “He was doing what he loved having spent the previous days having the most special time with Lindsay, Cameron and Alastair.
    “We would like to thank everyone for the support they have given us, in particular the mountain rescue teams, emergency services, members of the public and Chris’s friends that joined the search.
    “We will always treasure his energy, spirit and love. Thank you for all your thoughts and prayers.”
    The Aberdeenshire-born runner competed in international mountain running events for Team GB.

    Chris Smith is survived by a wife and two kidsCredit: PA:Press Association

    The Scot (No4500, centre) was a popular character on the mountain running sceneCredit: Twitter / @smithcj_5
    In the 2016 European Mountain Running Championships in Italy he helped secure Team GB a bronze medal.
    Smith lived in Haywards Heath, West Sussex, and was most recently a member of the Thames Valley Harriers.
    Tributes have flooded in for the much-loved athlete.
    A British Athletics statement on Friday morning added: “We are deeply saddened by the passing of Chris Smith, the Great Britain and Northern Ireland mountain runner.
    “Our thoughts are with his family and friends at this time.”
    Former Olympic sprinter Donna Fraser wrote online: “So sad… my condolences to his family.”

    We are deeply saddened by the passing of Chris Smith, the Great Britain and Northern Ireland mountain runner.Our thoughts are with his family and friends at this time. pic.twitter.com/vQNJqj90Ix
    — British Athletics (@BritAthletics) October 30, 2020

    The World Mountain Running Association stated: “Everybody at the WMRA is incredibly saddened by the devastating news about Chris Smith.”
    Former Team GB colleague Sarah Tunstall told the organisation: “He was a true gent, selfless team-mate and fantastic athlete who always left everything out there on race day.
    “I have countless fond memories of Chris and am privileged to have shared poignant moments in both our running careers, that will forever make me smile.”
    Andrew Douglas added: “His longevity at the top level of the sport is something I really admire and should be of inspiration to all involved in mountain running. He’ll be sorely missed, one of life’s genuinely special people.”

    Fellow trail runner Gary Priestley tweeted yesterday: “It is with great sadness that I hear Chris Smith’s body has been found.
    “He was an absolute gentleman & a mountain running great as well as very strong on the cross!! Thoughts are with his family!! I’ll never forget the good times we shared. RIP my friend.”
    Team GB 400-metre medallist Katharine Merry wrote online: “Awfully sad news… thoughts with friends and family.” More

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    Mo Farah’s I’m A Celebrity stint backed by athletics chiefs.. as long as Olympic bid stays on track

    ATHLETICS bosses have welcomed Mo Farah’s Jungle jaunt – provided it doesn’t damage his Tokyo Olympics bid.
    As we told you first, Britain’s most successful athlete, 37, has signed up for this year’s rescheduled I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!

    Mo Farah is set to appear on this year’s I’m A Celebrity in North Wales – provided it does not impact his Olympic preparationCredit: Pacemaker Press

    The four-time Olympic champion will join campmates next month at the new venue Gwrych Castle, North Wales, instead of the hot Australian rainforest.
    Eating creepy-crawlies and sleeping in cold, damp tents is not exactly ideal preparation for Farah’s quest to defend the 10,000m Olympic title next July.
    Jo Coates, CEO of UK Athletics, said: “It’s that knife-edge decision.
    “As a marketer, to have athletes in mainstream TV shows is just perfection.

    “However – and a big however – you would never want to do that to the detriment of performance.
    “I’d imagine there have been lengthy conversations. If he is there, there will have been lengthy conversations about whether this would affect performance.
    “The fact that it’s in Wales and not as long a time is very different from many weeks in Australia.
    “Part of our communications strategy is about reaching a new audience. That’s what we have to do.

    “And shows like that take our athletes to a completely different audience. But I would never condone it to the detriment of performance because ultimately that’s what they do.”
    UKA are hopeful they will have two Diamond League meetings on the 2021 calendar, which is published shortly.
    And Coates is confident the UK Indoors trials will happen next February regardless of whether or not they are allowed fans.
    She added: “Even if we don’t sell a ticket we can still put that event on, which is fantastic news for the sport.”

    I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! 2020 line-up More

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    Police confirm body found in search for former Team GB fell runner Chris Smith who went missing in Perthshire hills

    A BODY has been found in the search for former Team GB fell runner Chris Smith who vanished in Perthshire hills. 
    Chris, 43, was reported missing on Tuesday night after he failed to return from a run.

    He had set off on a run from Invervar near Aberfeldy, Perth and Kinross, at around 3pm. 
    His family, including his wife Lindsay and two children, became concerned when he did not return and called emergency services.
    It sparked a search-and-rescue operation involving mountain rescue teams, Police Scotland and the Coastguard.
    And officers have confirmed today that a body has been found near to Meall Garbh in the Glenlyon area in their search for the missing runner.

    A spokesperson said: “Police Scotland can confirm that at around 11:50am on Thursday, 29 October, 2020, the body of a man was found near to Meall Garbh in the Glenlyon area.
    “Formal identification has yet to take place however the family of missing 43-year-old Chris Smith has been informed.
    “Enquiries remain ongoing and a report will be submitted to the Procurator Fiscal in due course.”
    Smith represented Great Britain in international mountain running competitions.

    In 2016 he helped Team GB win bronze in the European Mountain Running Championships in Italy.
    He is originally from Aberdeenshire but lives in Haywards Heath, West Sussex.
    Smith is a member of Thames Valley Harriers.

    Team GB skateboarder Sky Brown, 11, fractures skull in horror fall before being airlifted to hospital More

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    Who is Mo Farah’s wife Tania, how many children do they have and how long have couple been married?

    OLYMPIC hero Mo Farah is set to join the I’m A Celebrity 2020 line-up.
    Farah said goodbye to the track in 2017 after four Olympic gold medals and six world championship wins, now focusing on the road races – with wife Tania forever by his side.

    Mo Farah with wife Tania and step-daughter RihannaCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    Who is Tania, and when did she marry Mo?

    The couple – who met while studying in London – married in 2010.
    Due to Farah’s training, they used to live in their adopted home of Portland, Oregon.
    Tania opened a’royal-themed’ luxury spa in Portland, named the British Manor Spa in May 2017.
    But they have since moved back to London – and Mo will go into this year’s I’m A Celeb following a period of isolation.

    An insider told The Sun: “Mo’s been a big fan of the show for years and was just waiting for the right time in his career to do it.
    “He obviously has an excellent level of fitness and mental focus so will be great at the Bushtucker Trials and will be a positive addition for keeping up team morale for campmates – especially as a lot of the celebs are worried how cold it will be.
    “It’s his first foray into reality TV so he’s a bit nervous about the challenges and will miss his family.”

    Britain’s Mo Farah celebrates with Tania at the Rio OlympicsCredit: Getty Images
    How many children do her and Mo have?
    The couple have a pair of twins – Aisha and Amani – born shortly after Farah’s twin triumph at London 2012, and a boy named Hussein in 2015.

    Mo traditionally celebrates his victories trackside with step-daughter Rihanna and Tania.
    Speaking at the time of the twins’ birth, Tania said: “It’s like a fairy tale. We couldn’t ask for anything more.”

    Mo with step-daughter Rihanna, wife Tania, and twin daughters Aisha and AmaniCredit: Getty Images

    Mo Farah celebrates with step-daughter Rihanna and wife TaniaCredit: Instagram More

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    Jade Jones reveals Olympic village secrets from drunk shenanigans to late-night Usain Bolt parties

    JADE JONES says the Olympic village is full of drunks and late-night shenanigans – and she once refused to join a wild Usain Bolt room party.
    In a revealing interview with SPORTbible, the two-time Olympic gold medal-winning taekwondo star gave an insight into what goes on behind-the-scenes at the biggest event in sport.

    Jade Jones has spilled the beans on what happens at the Olympic villageCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

    Jones turned down an invite to a late-night Usain Bolt partyCredit: EPA

    It seems everyone lets their hair down at some point, particularly Jamaican sprint superstar Bolt, who was in celebratory mood having scooped three gold medals.
    Though she did not specify whether it was the London 2012 or Rio 2016 Games, the Welshwoman said that everyone hits the booze as soon as their competitions are over.
    Of course, one thing usually leads to another when alcohol is consumed – and it is thought the IOC distributed 350,000 condoms, 100,000 female condoms and 175,000 packets of lube to more than 10,000 stars four years ago in Brazil.
    Jones, 27, said: “Everyone sees the Olympics all about performance and it is. But literally it’s a big party after and everyone gets drunk.

    “Everyone fights and competes on different days. I remember walking to the ring and walking to my event and literally there’s people coming in steaming, like falling over.
    “It’s so hard as you have to stay focused and not let that distract you.
    “Another time I remember I was coming back from dinner, and Usain Bolt was shouting people up to his room to come and have a party. I think it was his birthday. I didn’t go by the way.”
    Flint fighter Jones credits her ‘strict’ granddad for introducing her to Taekwondo at the age of eight to curb her wild ways.

    Legendary athlete Bolt is also famous for his party-loving anticsCredit: Getty – Contributor

    Jones said: “I was starting to be a bit naughty and cheeky and going off on the wrong path.
    “My granddad was very strict, very proper. He wanted me to go into a martial art and go in the right direction. Ever since then I have loved it.
    “I don’t think I’ve said this before but when I was ten I got caught smoking. I think I was the first ever person in primary school to get caught smoking.”
    Jones claims she would follow former Team GB boxer Nicola Adams on to reality TV in retirement but has ruled out an appearance on BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing.
    She added: “It’s amazing what Nicola is doing. The first same-sex partnership. She has made so much history. Now she is continuing to make history.
    “Yeah, I’d love to do it, but I think I’d be better on Dancing On Ice. I prefer the more dangerous ones because I cannot dance at all.”

    Usain Bolt announces he is self isolating after taking coronavirus test but insists he has ‘no symptoms’ More

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    Christian Coleman OUT of next year’s Tokyo Olympics as world’s fastest man receives two-year suspension

    ATHLETICS superstar Christian Coleman will MISS next summer’s Tokyo Olympics after he was handed a two-year ban for missing drugs tests.
    In a damaging day for the sport, the world’s fastest man is ineligible to compete in track-and-field events until May 13, 2022, meaning he will not take part in the rescheduled Games in Japan.

    Christian Coleman will MISS the Tokyo Olympics after a two-year ban was upheldCredit: AP:Associated Press

    Coleman’s agent, Emanuel Hudson of HSInternational Sports Management, said: “The decision of the Disciplinary Tribunal established under the World Athletics rules is unfortunate and will be immediately appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
    “Mr Coleman has nothing further to say until such time as the matter can be heard in the Court of jurisdiction.”
    The Atlanta-born athlete has a history of missing tests, having escaped a ban on a technicality in 2019 before winning gold at the Doha Athletics World Championships.
    The AIU charged Coleman, 24, in June 2020 for three whereabouts failures within a 12-month period.

    One related to a missed test on January 16, 2019, which he did not contest. But Coleman did dispute the filing failure on April 26, 2019 and the missed test on December 9, 2019.
    For the first one, it was claimed the athlete only updated his whereabouts information – he was training in the State of Iowa – after a doping officer attended his home residence in Lexington, Kentucky, and then called his mobile.
    Last December, two drug-busters reportedly “rang the bell and knocked loudly” on Coleman’s apartment door for over an hour – while the runner was out Christmas shopping nearby.
    The AIU rejected Coleman’s “impossible” explanation of events that he had returned home briefly during the allocated one-hour time period, ate a purchased chipotle, watched the start of a Monday night NFL game, and then went out again.

    The AIU say receipts showing he had bought 16 items from Walmart disproved his claims he had popped home.
    At the time of his provisional suspension, Coleman had complained that the AIU’s doping control officers had not called him on that night weeks before Christmas.
    The AIU said in its judgement that doping control officers were not required to phone athletes.

    The AIU report said: “The consequences for athletes who are subject to three missed tests are draconian.
    “But rather than learn from his experience with USADA, the athlete’s attitude to his obligations can fairly be described as entirely careless, perhaps even reckless.
    “We understand that it is very difficult for a young man, blessed with the prodigious talent which the athlete obviously has, to find himself suddenly at the centre of the public gaze.
    “But success of this nature, and the financial rewards that follow, also give rise to responsibilities that must be taken seriously and observed.”
    Coleman, who maintains his innonence, has never failed a drugs test and the report added that there is no evidence that he has doped during his career.
    It added: “For the avoidance of doubt, there is no suggestion that the athlete has ever taken any prohibited substance and we wish to make that clear at the outset.”
    According to emails sent by his lawyer to USA Today, it is understood Coleman will appeal the ban imposed by the Athletics Integrity Unit through the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
    But unless he wins that case he will sit out the Olympics next summer, opening the door for a potential British runner to win a medal.

    Christian Coleman wins mens 100m final at the World Athletics Championships with a time of 9.76 seconds More