© Getty Images Enlarge Mo Farah put a bad week behind him

Mo Farah said his row with Great Britain team-mate Andy Vernon in the week inspired him to the first world record of his career at the Indoor Grand Prix on Saturday.

The double Olympic champion was roared to a new world indoor best of 8mins 03.40secs over two miles at the at the Barclaycard Arena in Birmingham.

Farah, 31, whose public feud with Vernon had dominated the build-up to the event, let his legs do the talking as wiped more than a second off Kenenisa Bekele's previous mark.

He sat on the shoulder of Kenya's Paul Koech before hitting the front with seven laps to go and pulling clear.

From then on it was Farah against the clock and he came home comfortably inside Bekele's time of 8mins 04.35secs, which the Ethiopian great set at the same meeting seven years ago.

Farah shows off his world record time © Getty Images Enlarge

"So many times I have been asked, 'Am I ever going to break a world record?'," Farah revealed. "So it's nice to say I've done it now.

"I want to be back on the track, that's where I belong. "[The Vernon row] inspired me, I wanted to do it. Whatever's happened has happened, we've got to move on, but at the same time I'm an athlete, that's what I do best. I just have to keep running."

Farah's previous indoor best over two miles, the European record from 2012, had stood at 8:08.07, but he went through the first mile in 4:03.9 and the last one in 3:59.5.

The duo's disagreement had become public on Tuesday when Vernon criticised the strength of the field Farah faced in Birmingham and in truth the clock was the Londoner's only real opponent.

Vernon congratulated Farah on Twitter, saying: "Everything aside that was a cracking run @Mo_Farah. Congratulations on the new WR."

But asked if he had a message for Vernon, Farah said: "No, at the end of the day whatever's done is done. I just have to move on.

"I think it's too soon to say anything right now. I've moved on and put that behind me. I want to keep running well."

Farah, who has five global track titles over 5,000 and 10,000 metres, said the record had given him the taste for more outdoors.

"Definitely, it's about setting myself a goal and knowing what I want out of the year," said Farah, whose personal bests over 5,000m and 10,000m are some way off Bekele's world records.

"It's two different things going for a world record or going for a championship.

"I shouldn't get carried away, it's only two miles indoors, but at the same time it would be nice to be able to do what I can do for 10k, if I can go close or break it.

"But I will never give up [on championships]. I want to be able to know I collected as many medals as I could for my country."

Farah will not compete at the European Indoor Championships in Prague next month.

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