The 34-year-old Somalia-born Briton -- who will switch his focus to road running -- can capture his 10th successive world or Olympic title in the 10000 metres tomorrow.
Then he hopes to bow out in style on the track in London where he achieved his first Olympic double in 2012 with the 5000m on Saturday week.
That will bring to an end a six year spell where like Bolt in the sprints Farah has dominated.
However whilst many question how will the sport cope without Bolt and his engaging showmanship -- lightning bolt and all -- perhaps unfairly the same has not been said about the vacuum that Farah will leave in his wake.
Despite his achievements -- Olympic (2012/16) and world doubles (2013/15) at 5000m and 10000m -- the British public have been left largely unmoved.
Only once, in 2011, has he reached the top three in the popular vote for the prestigious BBC Sports Personality of the Year poll.
"It's really sad, because for me he is the perfect British story," Brownlee told The Guardian in December last year after Farah finished only fourth in the poll.
"It's what we should be about: a person who comes to Britain as a young man, as a refugee, and an ex?schoolteacher (Alan Watkinson) identifies something that he's brilliant at and he represents Britain as the best in the world.
"I think that's a fantastic British story."
Farah, though, is used to adversity having been separated from his twin brother Hassan for 12 years until he returned to Somalia for the latter's wedding.
- 'I wasn't focused' -
======================
Farah, who was forthright with regard to US President Donald Trump's remarks about Muslims last year when he was a candidate describing them as "blasphemy", also had to put up with racist comments at his London school.
"You make friends. I was always quite accepted, I think because I never saw myself as different to anyone else, a different colour. I had white friends, black friends.
"I was easy going. The occasional comment, I just chose not to hear it.
"I was good at running so the kids liked me for that. If I hadn't been into running I wouldn't have made friends, met so many people and learned the language as quickly as I did."
"I wasn't focused when I was 16," he told 'The Big Issue'.
"I was just chilling out, going to school, seeing my friends. I wasn't taking running seriously.
"I'm not complaining but now I think if I'd listened to my coach more then maybe I could have been more successful. I could have won more medals.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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