Chelimo, 30, jutted his body forward to cross the finish in his final steps and then lay prone for several moments after falling to the ground before the official results flashed on the screen in the Olympic Stadium.

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They had seemed neck and neck (or foot and foot) in the final meters of the race until Kimeli sputtered, slightly, in his final steps.

Kimeli soon insisted to reporters he wanted to review the already certified results — a complaint that Chelimo shrugged off as he spoke with reporters afterward: “That was a clean race.”

Paul Chelimo

Uganda’s Joshua Cheptegei won gold on Friday; Mohammed Ahmed of Canada won silver.

As he spoke with reporters, Chelimo exulted in the back-to-back medals and, when asked about his final push over the finish, said “I’m the person that I give 100 percent.”

“Getting the bronze today … it’s what I did, I worked really hard to get that,” he said.

“The goal was just to get the medal so I went out there and the last two laps were crazy,” he said.

He also said the bronze was for his younger brother, Alberto,who died in the spring. “It’s been a tough year,” he said.

Chelimo has said he developed an interest in running while growing up in Kenya: “I realized that I was talented when I used to play tag with my brothers and, trust me, they would never catch me,” he said in2018.

Paul Chelimo men’s 5000m

The men’s 5000m bronze adds to Team USA’s smaller-than-usual medal haul in track and field, a sport in which they have traditionally dominated.

Other wins include Sydney McLaughlin and Dalilah Muhammad in the women’s 400m hurdles, Raven Saunders in women’s shot put, Grant Halloway in men’s 110m hurdles and Katie Nageotte in women’s pole vault.

To learn more about Team USA, visitTeamUSA.org. Watch the Tokyo Olympics now on NBC.

source: people.com