Kelvin Kiptum was a gold-medal favorite. After his death, his memory lingers over Olympic marathon
PARIS (AP) - The memory of Kenya's Kelvin Kiptum hovers over the men's Olympic marathon.
His competitors will wind through the streets of Paris on Saturday chasing a gold medal he would have been favored to win. They will stare down a world-record time that he once set.
The 24-year-old marathon prodigy was Kenya’s newest star in the making before his death in February. He was killed along with his coach in a car crash, the latest tragedy to strike the nation’s storied long-distance community.
His teammate, Benson Kipruto, remembers waking up to the news. He couldn't train. Too heartbroken. That's why he will think of Kiptum at the start line - a quick remembrance of the runner he didn't know all that well but who still made a big impact on him. Once the race starts, though, Kipruto will focus on running - because that's what Kiptum would've done.