Farah signs off with victorypublished at 21:07 British Summer Time 24 August 2017
Right, let's leave this here.
What a picture, what a career, what an athlete.
The Diamond League concludes in Zurich on 1 September.
Mo Farah wins final track race to clinch 5,000m Diamond League title
World champion Muktar Edris falls at finish and comes third
16 series champions decided at Zurich Diamond League meeting
CJ Ujah beats Justin Gatlin to win 100m Diamond League trophy
Miller-Uibo beats Thompson, Ta Lou & Schippers in 200m
Sally Pearson wins 100m hurdles
Isaac Makwala wins 400m final
GB women second in 4x100m
Mike Henson
Right, let's leave this here.
What a picture, what a career, what an athlete.
The Diamond League concludes in Zurich on 1 September.
We have highlights of all the action on Saturday - on BBC One, the BBC Sport website and, of course, the sport app.
You can catch them at 13:10-14:00 BST.
Repeated on Monday 13:00-14:00 on BBC Two.
Who will fly the flag for Britain now that Mo Farah is leaving the track?
There's a big gap to fill in the team.
But what will he do on the road?
Exciting times ahead for Mo...
4x100m relay
Elaine Thompson did not run in the world championships relay and she just showed how much Jamaica missed her.
A storming last leg from the Olympic champion who overhauls Daryll Neita to claim victory over Great Britain by just one hundredth of a second, 41.85 to 41.86.
Britain's time was just nine hundredths of a second away from the national record - this quartet have plenty more to come.
4x100m relay
Last up, is the traditional 4x100m relay.
Great Britain's dream team of Asha Philip, Desiree Henry, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita are here.
The world champion United States team are here as are bronze medallists Jamaica with Elaine Thompson.
Men's javelin
Czech Jakub Vadlejch, silver medallist in London, goes one better in the Diamond League final as he claims the javelin title with a throw of 88.50m.
Men's 400m
Victory in 43.95 with five press-ups for just desserts as Isaac Makwala romps home.
His job was made a whole lot easier though by Steven Gardiner's stumble and stack out of the blocks which left his main rival sprawling inside the first five metres.
Men's 200m
Botswana's Isaac Makwala turned up for the 400m final in London but was turned away at the door with the IAAF deciding that he was too much of a health rish after coming down with a bad case of Southwark belly.
Bahamas' Steven Gardiner took silver behind Wayde van Niekerk, who is absent with illness.
Let's see how this plays out..
100m hurdles
Sally Pearson does a little hop of joy as the big screen finally reveals that she has managed to hold off the challenge of American Sharika Nelvis.
Both the front two were given the same time - 12.55 - but Pearson's more gymnastic dip took it.
100m hurdles
There were few overseas world champions as popular as Sally Pearson at London 2017.
The Australian recovered from a horrific wrist break to take the world title.
There is no Kendra Harrison, but Jazmin Stowers, the second fastest in the world this year who failed to get through the US trials, is here.
World silver medallist Dawn Harper-Nelson is also there as the second prong of a five-fronted US challenge.
Men's 5000m
What a finish!
Mo Farah was clinging on with his very fingernails down the 100m. The hounds of hell were right on his heels, Muktar Edris flung himself at the line, Paul Chelimo tried to squeeze through the narrowest of gaps, but none of them could unseat the Olympic champion.
Farah wins by four hundredths of a second on his last track outing. Outstanding entertainment as always.
Men's 5000m
Mo Farah takes the bell in the lead with Ethiopia's Kejelcha with him...
Men's 5000m
Mohammad Ahmed leads with two laps to go, but Mo Farah is right on his shoulder, checking out the rest of the field's positions on the big screen as he hears the bell.
Men's 5000m
Suddenly the race has come off the gas.
There is a lack of enthusiasm at the front and there is a lot of looking around at each other as they coast through.
This is surely playing into Mo Farah's hands with his formidable kick and three laps to go.
Men's 5,000m
It is a toasty, if not red-hot, pace in the men's 5000m. The field have just come through 2000m in 5.13 with Mo Farah tucked away in midfield.
Men's long jump
World champion Luvo Manyonga has struck out to an early lead with a leap of 8.31m.