Typically, runners are confident they can outrun anyone (or anything) in a non-race scenario. Missed the bus? No problem–you’ll catch it at the next stop. Someone snatched your purse? They won’t get far. Last week, four-time Olympic gold medallist Sir Mo Farah confirmed this theory–while on foot, the athlete reportedly pursued and caught thieves who drove away with his phone.
A year of retirement from competition seems to have had little impact on Farah’s top-tier fitness. While jogging with his wife, Tania, through his estate in Surrey, U.K., Farah set his phone down by the side of the road to collect it at the end of his run. (Farah and his family reside in a 964-acre gated community with extensive security.)
According to the Daily Mail, two men in a white van somehow slipped by the guarded entrance and nabbed the phone. Farah sprinted after the trespassers as they drove away, successfully catching them and taking back his device. Sources say he is angry about the security breach and an investigation has been launched.
This isn’t the first time Farah has faced members of the public in a “race.” Last year, he competed in a 100m dads’ race at one of his kids’ schools. But in that instance, even wearing track spikes, he finished third, losing to a dad who was wearing jeans.
Alongside his four Olympic golds, Farah has six world championship titles in the 5,000m and 10,000m events, and was the second runner in history to win the 5,000 and 10,000m at back-to-back Olympic Games. In 2016, he moved up to the marathon, winning the Chicago Marathon in 2018 and finishing third in London the same year. The British athlete retired last September; the 2023 Great North Run in Newcastle, U.K., marked his final competition.