Brussels, Belgium - To the capacity crowd of 47,000 at the
Stade Roi Baudouin madly urging him on, it may have appeared that
Saif Saaeed Shaheen only knew the World record in the 3000 metres
Steeplechase was finally his, when he waved his thanks and
appreciation some fifty metres before reaching the finish line.But Shaheen, the reigning World Champion, said his new global
standard of 7:53.63, breaking the 7:55.28 set by Brahim Boulami on the
same track just over three years ago, was all but assured two-thirds into
the race.
"Just after the 2000 metre mark, when I saw 5:18, I said that this is what
I've been training for. Then with two laps to go, I saw it was like 5:47, and
I said I was inside the World record. And I just kept pushing harder and
harder. When I saw the last lap, 6:49, I was very happy. Normally my last
lap is 59, 60 or 61. I thought, 'man, I'm inside by six or seven seconds.'"
It was a fitting season finale for the event's premiere star of the past two
years, whose effort this evening sliced nearly four seconds from his
previous best. Unable to compete at the Olympic Games because of his
change of allegiance to Qatar last year, the Memorial Van Damme was
his Olympic Games, and he didn't disappoint.
Following pacemakers Vincent Le Dauphin and Kipkirui Misoi through
2000 metres, the 21-year-old said he was guided by the crowd for the
remaining two-and-half laps.
"What made me run fast was the crowd, and the drums, especially down
by the water jump," he said. "It really made me run fast," he added,
mimicking the quick sustained rhythm of the stadium's percussionists.
Watching the Olympic Games from his home in Nairobi was
disappointing, but Shaheen, the former Kenyan Stephen Cherono,
found an appropriate way to comfort himself.
"Yes, I was a little bit frustrated," Shaheen admitted as he recalled the
Kenyan podium sweep. "When I watched the Games I just consoled
myself that I had an injury. So I sat down next to the TV and watched the
Olympics like any other person."
"It could have been a very interesting race for me," he continued. "They
were very, very happy. The way I saw it was that they were celebrating
because I was not here. If I was there, they would have maybe been
second or third. Because I would have scared them. Because they fear
me so much."
Never one to mask his confidence, Shaheen is also very willing to give
credit when it is due, and was eager to do so tonight. After all, after
numerous record assaults, several very close, he knows he can't go it
alone.
"I talked to the pacemakers this morning after breakfast and again after
lunch, and I just said, 'man, just try to take me fast through the first 2000
metres, and I'll do the rest alone.' And I really, really appreciate what
they did for me. But breaking the World record again. that's very, very
difficult now. I may not get another opportunity again to do it. So I really
thank them."
After capping his stellar 2003 season with the fastest time of the year en
route to a thrilling win at the World Athletics Final last September,
Shaheen said he would probably move on from the steeplechase at the
end of 2004. But since he was not able to contest the Olympic Games,
Shaheen said that plan has changed.
"Perhaps I'll run the steeple until I get Olympic gold. Then I'll try to run
some other distances: the 5000, the 10,000, the Marathon. But in
Beijing," he confirmed, "I will run the 3000 metres Steeplechase."