The four-time Olympic gold medallist will race his last 10,000m on the IAAF circuit at the Golden Spike meet in the northeastern czech city of Ostrava on Wednesday.
Then comes an outing at the London Diamond League over 3000m, followed by a training camp in southern France to finetune preparations for August 4-13 World Athletics Championships.
It is no exaggeration to say Farah has successfully overcome Kenyan and Ethiopian team tactics to dominate the 5000 and 10,000m.
"It's a little bit sad because obviously track is where I made it, where it changed my life in terms of competing at London Olympic Games and winning the double and continuing from there," Farah said of his decision to step away from the track.
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"It's been an amazing journey for me but I have to move on now, everything must come to an end at some point.
- End on a high -
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Farah said he was looking forward to performing in front of home fans in the British capital for the worlds, with the longer aim to return to London from his Oregon training camp.
"It's better to end it on a high. If London goes as well as I want and everything goes perfect, you won't see me on the track, you might see me do some crazy events, but in terms of 5000 and 10,000 I'll call it a day," Farah said.
"It's really different training for marathon than the track," he said.
"When I finish track I'd like to be able to sit back a bit, do a few marathons to get used to it and then after that make a decision.
"To be honest, sometimes I do feel like maybe I'll run a few marathons and call it a day, it depends on how motivated I am."
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