The Day

Kipsang, Keitany try to defend Marathon titles

- By RACHEL COHEN AP Sports Writer

New York — Wilson Kipsang is a four-time major marathon champion and former world-record holder.

What he can't guarantee is whether he'll be an Olympian.

Kipsang and fellow Kenyan Mary Keitany look to defend their titles Sunday at the New York City Marathon in what could also be an audition for the team that goes to next summer's Rio Games. Their home country, with many more elite marathoner­s than the three slots allotted, briefly planned to hold trials before scrapping that idea.

Exactly how Athletics Kenya will pick its representa­tives remains unclear. The process did not pan out four years ago, when the world's top distance running nation failed to win gold in the men's or women's marathon.

Kipsang was the bronze medalist in 2012, but he would've forgone the chance to go for gold in 2016 had Kenya proceeded to hold trials in February, running a lucrative spring marathon instead. He'd prefer for the team to be picked in February based on runners' overall abilities so the selectees can start readying themselves mentally to peak in August.

"You know how to run the next race and try to prepare," Kipsang said.

But the choices won't be made until after the spring marathon season, and he worries those races will carry outsize important. Kipsang noted that he finished fifth — a major disappoint­ment by his standards — in the London Marathon in April 2013 only to set the world record the following September.

"It's not an indication if you run well in February that you're going to run well in August," he said. "Marathon is more about preparatio­n and training."

Other top Kenyans running Sunday include Stanley Biwott, the runner-up to Kipsang at the 2014 London Marathon, and reigning Boston Marathon women's champ Caroline Rotich.

"Right now I don't know yet how it's going to be picked, but it's part of what I want to be in my life," Rotich said of the Olympic team. "I'd love to represent (Kenya) and be in the Olympics. It's one of those things where I'm going to get out there and do my best."

The U.S. uses the model of holding Olympic trials in February, so most of the top Americans are skipping New York. One exception is 40-year-old Meb Keflezighi, the 2009 NYC Marathon champ. Keflezighi — whose resume also includes a 2004 Olympic silver medal and the 2014 Boston Marathon title — won the 2012 trials after running New York when the turnaround was even shorter.

As usual, the Ethiopians will challenge the Kenyans. Lelisa Desisa won his second Boston Marathon title in April, after Kipsang pulled away from him in Central Park last year in New York. Yemane Tsegay is looking to break through following a runner-up finish in Boston to Desisa and a silver medal at the world championsh­ips just 10 weeks ago.

Reigning London Marathon champion Tigist Tufa is part of a deep field on the women's side. Tufa is also coming off an appearance at worlds, where she placed sixth.

Kipsang dropped out of the world championsh­ips race with about five miles to go, wilting in the Beijing heat. He now prefers to think of it as "just like a normal long run in training" as part of his preparatio­n for New York.

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