Update: Gophers runner Hassan Mead fell after a collision with a couple of runners, including event favorite Mo Farah of Great Britain, in the final lap of the 5,000-meter run.
Mead said he would file an appeal. If successful, that would get him into the finals of the event. Fellow U.S. runner Bernard Lagat, who finished fifth, said he thinks Mead will have a good chance of winning the appeal.
Mead finished the race 13th in the 25-runner heat. His time was 13:34.27, which was 29th among the 51 runners in the two heats. Before the fall, the South High graduate was in a good position to qualify for the finals.
The heat was won by Hagos Gebrhiwet of Ethiopia in 13:24.65. Farah, the 10,000-meter champ, finished third in 13:25.25.
Mead had been running a strong race at the time of his fall. He ran in a pack with the top runners for most of the race and was third going into the final lap.
Farah, who won both the 5,000 and the 10,000 at the London Olympics in 2012, successfully defended his title at the longer distance in a dramatic final last Saturday when he recovered after tumbling to the track.
He had a slight trip after his stumble with Mead, but was quickly back into stride and ran comfortably with the leading pack to finish third.
"I've got such a long stride ... I always get tripped up or tangled up with someone," Farah said. "But I managed to stay on my feet. It's quite nerve wracking."
Farah was among those who consoled Mead after the race.
The top five finishers will automatically advance to the finals, along with the five fastest times among the other runners. The cutoff was 13:26.02 by Lagat.
Come back to startribune.com later for more on this story.
RIO DE JANEIRO – When Hassan Mead was a senior on the Minneapolis South cross-country team, he ran in the Roy Griak Invitational at the University of Minnesota. On the golf course. In the mud.
"That's why the golf people hate us," joked Gophers track and cross-country coach Steve Plasencia. "We really muck up the course."
Mead reached a valley near the end of race that had turned into a bog. Had this been Louisiana, that's where the alligators would have hung out. "Hassan powered his way through there and I said, 'Wow, this guy has got some strength,' " Plasencia said.