Jamaica's Usain Bolt pulls up sharply on the final leg of the men's sprint relay on his track farewell.

Story highlights

Usain Bolt injured in final championship race

Pulls up as Britain wins men's 4x100m relay

Mo Farah beaten in men's 5,000m

Ethiopia's Muktar Edris wins gold

CNN  — 

Usain Bolt’s farewell appearance at the world championships ended in painful and disastrous fashion as he pulled up injured on the final leg of the men’s 4x100m relay Saturday.

Bolt took the baton for Jamaica in third place but within a few strides he had fallen to the ground, clutching his left leg, as host Britain secured a shock gold ahead of a United States team containing Justin Gatlin.

Bolt falls to the track on the final leg of the sprint relay.

The 30-year-old Bolt, beaten into third in the individual 100m behind Gatlin and his US team compatriot Christian Coleman, was comforted by teammates after getting to his feet, his face etched in pain.

The capacity crowd in the London Stadium was still digesting the shock earlier defeat for home hero Mo Farah in the men’s 5,000m final, before the drama of Bolt’s last agonizing appearance.

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READ: Gatlin spoils Bolt’s individual farewell

He had been bidding for a 12th world championship gold to bring down the curtain on his glittering career, but instead limped out of the London Stadium arena.

Victory for the British quartet of CJ Ujah, Adam Gemili, who ran a storming second leg, Daniel Talbot and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake was stunning compensation for Farah’s earlier defeat.

They won in 37.47 seconds, with the US taking silver at 0.05sec and Japan with a surprise bronze.

The agony is clear for all to see as Bolt is comforted by Jamaican teammates.

For his massive global following, the perfect script would have seen the Bolt of old running down Britain and the US for yet another gold, but it was not to be.

“He didn’t tell us exactly what happened but from what I saw, it looked like a strain or a cramp of some sort,” teammate Julian Forte told IAAF radio.

“He kept apologizing to us but we told him there was no need to apologize – injuries are part of the sport.”

Jamaican team doctor Dr Kevin Jones told AFP that Bolt had suffered from “cramp in his left hamstring”.

“The last three weeks have been hard for him, you know. We hope for the best for him,” he added.

Jamaica’s 110m hurdles champion Omar McLeod, who ran the first leg for the quartet, summed up the feeling of everyone.

“Usain Bolt’s name will always live on,” he said.

But another teammate, Yohan Blake, who won Olympic relay gold with Bolt in 2012 and 2016, slammed organizers for the delay in starting the race because of medal ceremonies.

“Usain was really cold. In fact Usain said to me, ‘Yohan, I think this is crazy’,” he said.

Farah bows out with silver

Farah, who won the 10,000 title in dramatic fashion of the opening day at the London Stadium, had to settle for silver behind Ethiopian Muktar Edris in his final championship race on the track.

He edged out American Paul Chelimo in a desperate dash for the line, the last mile of a hitherto slow run race run in just under four minutes.

Farah, 34, will now turn his attention to the marathon after failing in his bid to double up at the Olympics or World Championship for the fifth time, including double gold in London 2012 and the Rio Games last year.

Britain's Mo Farah slumps to the track in disappointment after failing in his bid for gold in the 5,000m at the world athletics championship in London.

Edris, a former world junior champion, timed his last lap burst to perfection to win in 13 minutes 32.79 seconds, copying Farah’s famous Mobot gesture as he crossed the line.

It was not the farewell Farah wanted, but he pointed to his earlier exertions in a dramatic 10,000m final as reason for lacking his usual devastating finish.

“The 10,000m took a lot more out of me than I had realized,” he told BBC Sport.

“I gave it my all. I didn’t have a single thing left to give at the end.”