Top 76 Quotes & Sayings by Haile Gebrselassie

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Ethiopian athlete Haile Gebrselassie.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Haile Gebrselassie

Haile Gebrselassie is an Ethiopian retired long-distance track and road running athlete, and businessman. He won two Olympic gold medals over 10,000 metres and four World Championship titles in the event. He won the Berlin Marathon four times consecutively and also had three straight wins at the Dubai Marathon. Further to this, he won four world titles indoors and was the 2001 World Half Marathon Champion. Just like very few other great Ethiopians, Haile has repeatedly put Ethiopia's name to the world and many countries have showed great admiration to him outside of the sports world.

When you promise something, you must fulfill it.
I will always listen to my coaches. But first I listen to my body. If what they tell me suits my body, great. If my body doesn't feel good with what they say, then always my body comes first.
First, do enough training. Then believe in yourself and say: I can do it. Tomorrow is my day. And then say: the person in front of me, he is just a human being as well; he has two legs, I have two legs, that is all. That is mentally how you prepare.
I haven't done a marathon for a long time. So we'll see. I will need good luck. — © Haile Gebrselassie
I haven't done a marathon for a long time. So we'll see. I will need good luck.
In the rainy season, sometimes to get to the first lesson we had to run really quick, because we had to cross the river to school and we'd have to go up and down the bank to find a place to cross because there is no bridge.
Many people know that Ethiopia is poor. When I break a world record, maybe people get to know something else about Ethiopia, something good. We can't make planes or cars, we don't have the materials. We do what we can.
I wanted to experience New York, to look up and see buildings.
When you run the marathon, you run against the distance, not against the other runners and not against the time.
In my life I do a lot of things but I never forget my training.
I always tell young athletes the same thing, 'Wherever you go, whatever you do, what must your top priority be? Running.'
In the marathon a crazy athlete can just keep pushing from the beginning, at a championship you don't need a time just to win the race.
I feel a social responsibility. We need to open people's eyes. There is a lack of education in Ethiopia.
My school was six miles away from where I lived on the farm. I had to walk and run, there and back every day, through gorges and over rivers. If I was late, there was a very big stick waiting for me.
I wanted to be famous. I wanted people to talk about me.
Athletics is in my blood. — © Haile Gebrselassie
Athletics is in my blood.
He was not a runner, my father, but he was quick. I always remember it was very difficult to escape from him when he was angry. If he wanted to beat us he would always catch us. Even me, he could always catch me.
I can't change everything by myself but I can be one of the people who are trying to change the situation.
Some people start a sport just to reduce weight, or some say, 'My doctor ordered me to run and do exercise', and for others, they run for completely different benefits. But it is not like that with sport. We need to eat, we need to rest, but also we need to run.
Life is a kind of struggle. Life is a sort of fight.
What can you do if a part of it is uphill? You can't work out another route. You've just got to run the one they give you. But they tell me London is a nice course. Even the cobbles, I hope, are not very much of a problem for me.
It is not my duty to spend my money in my country, but it is what I want to do. There is nowhere else I would like to invest.
If I don't train enough, of course I'm nervous.
Always, if you win mentally, you can win physically as well.
I love running and I will always run.
You need three things to win: discipline, hard work and, before everything maybe, commitment. No one will make it without those three. Sport teaches you that.
I find the business world hard.
I have seen things few of my countrymen have. The first time I went on an aeroplane I couldn't work out how the lavatories worked up in the sky.
I think if you come first with a new world record, that is the best.
This is what I wanted. They tell me that London is the best field in history. I wanted to be part of that. Because everyone will be there it will be a wonderful challenge for me. You can see the best runners, how they look, how they run. For me to beat the best is what counts.
My father didn't think running was sensible. He told me running is just wasting time.
I used to run to school, 10k every day. And this at altitude, perfect preparation, really.
My father thought sport was something fun - he didn't know it was a way to make money. Then I won a Mercedes at the world championships and I gave it to him. From the moment it arrived my father said: 'Good, you can support not just yourself but me too'.
Schooling is so important.
At the moment I am a little bit politician, yes. I think that could be my next step. It is not because I want power, it is because of what I think I could do for the people.
I'm lucky. The best possible place in the world for training is Addis Ababa, so I am home all the time except when I am racing. I like to be there, near my family, my kids, also the real estate business I run with my wife.
When I had no shoes I was comfortable - I used to run barefoot. When I wore shoes it was difficult. To run in shoes was ok, but at the beginning of my career it was hard.
Athletes have to be confident and I am thinking like that.
The more you are getting older, you lose a little something. Of course there is another advantage, because of your long experience you can use it.
I remember in particular my first victory when I achieved a very fast time in what were perfect conditions but since then the wind has always been a factor against me.
What is important is to win. — © Haile Gebrselassie
What is important is to win.
I'm never satisfied.
I want to avoid injuries by running only road.
I was the kind of child who worked hard every day with the cows and sheep - I was a very aggressive boy.
When we race in London a world record will be the last thing on our minds.
You lose the speed before the stamina.
That is not enough. Sport has been great for me, a great learning place that if you want to achieve you can, even if you are from the poorest part of Africa.
Eradicate poverty. This is all that matters in my country. When I am out training I think about this a lot; when I am running it is going over in my mind. As a country we cannot move forward until we eradicate poverty.
Like some high official, you have to tell your brain: 'Do it. Come on. I have to do it.'
You know for me when I promise something I want to deliver. If you don't, you have to disappear.
Since I achieved something, running has exploded in my country. For me sometimes it is difficult even to know who the athletes are who are competing at the highest level. There are thousands.
You know the marathon in my country is just exceptional. It's like soccer in England. If England win the world cup and Ethiopia win the marathon - it's the same. — © Haile Gebrselassie
You know the marathon in my country is just exceptional. It's like soccer in England. If England win the world cup and Ethiopia win the marathon - it's the same.
Why should I say I will retire in three or four years? You retire the very moment you utter those words.
I have to change a lot of things before I become a good marathon runner.
You know, I want to help my country. Definitely I can help them, simply by winning races. Sure, they can follow my path to a good career. But for me it is not enough. I want to be more than that. In everything I want to be a role model.
I want to go down in history.
Once you have commitment, you need the discipline and hard work to get you there.
When I run in Ethiopia, I look out and see eucalyptus trees and rivers.
You must do as your people do. If my people are poor, I must be poor. People ask me, 'Why don't you find a personal coach or a private car?' I can't. Then I won't be part of my people.
This hand is not very active always, because it was in this hand that I carried my books. My carrying hand was always my strongest. Now I think my other hand has developed more muscles from signing all those autographs.
I'm a runner first before anything else.
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