 Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) president Brian Lewis  battled two cramps and aching knees to finish his “walk the talk”  mission when he crossed the finish line of the 26.2-mile Trinidad and  Tobago International Marathon, yesterday.
Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) president Brian Lewis  battled two cramps and aching knees to finish his “walk the talk”  mission when he crossed the finish line of the 26.2-mile Trinidad and  Tobago International Marathon, yesterday.
 Draped in the national  flag and followed by an army of athletes, supporters and well-wishers,  Lewis willed himself to complete a journey that started promptly at 3.30  a.m. yesterday at St Mary’s Junction, Freeport, and concluded almost  seven hours later in the blazing sun in front Whitehall at the Queen’s  Park Savannah.
The mission, to raise awareness of the  #10gold24  Athlete Welfare and Preparation initiative, was complete. But it was  anything but easy. 
Lewis would say after the race: “I had to dig  real deep. The pain from the cramps were so severe and after a while it  actually felt that I had pulled my left hamstring in the last two miles.  But quitting is not in my make up.”
Lewis would have been drawing on  the memories of six marathons he had treked during his 20s and 30s. But  Lewis, his knees and bones plundered by those same marathons and his  sport of choice, the contact-filled rugby.
In the early morning  darkness, Lewis embarked on his awareness trek with radio commentator  Tony Lee,former CNC3 sports anchor Roger Sant, and top pistol shooter,  Sgt Roger Daniel of the Trinidad and Tobago Defence Force— the only  individual who would accompany Lewis the entire course.
The TTOC boss  comfortably completed those initial miles, having prepared himself on a  diet that included up to 16 mile walks to Maracas Bay.
Daniel, a  T&T high performance athlete who won bronze at the CAC Games last  November, was keeping Lewis up to his paces urging him to accelerate and  go steady at set intervals, making sure the former rugby player was on  target for his seven-hour goal time. “Get your arms into it,” Daniel  would echo regularly.
At Munroe Road, Cunupia, Tony Lee had conceded  way to TT Pro League CEO Dexter Skeene as Lewis chugged on in the  darkness. Skeene gave way to former TTFA technical director Anton  Corneal then, as dawn broke, to the ever chirpy Andre Baptiste, who gave  regular radio reports by cellphone until the finish. A group of  wrestlers donning “TTOC support” tee shirts had also joined. 
At Mt  Lambert, top T&T marathon swimmer Christian Marsden had inserted  himself. A few minutes after was when Lewis started to experience his  first difficulties. Even with supporters along the Eastern Main Road  clapping and shouting their support, including a young girl who  personally handed Lewis $84 for the Fund at a water stop in Champ  Fleurs. the reality of dehydrating muscles descended on Lewis.
As  Lewis and a growing entourage (his wife Sandra, parents of top junior  swimmer Dylan Carter (Tracy and Everard) and school friend Anton La  Fond) traversed San Juan, the accompanying WI Sports pick up tray turned  into an impromptu stretcher as physio Roger Evelyn had to deep massage  Lewis’ left hamstring in San Juan. “Whatever you do, make sure I am able  to finish,” Lewis told the physio, Daniel and Baptiste.
Ten minutes  after ingesting some salt, applying some sport rub and resuming his  walk, Lewis was lying prostrate in the pick up again. But favouring that  leg, Lewis still got up again and resumed the walk. As Lewis neared the  23-mile post, renowned flagman Joey Richardson had joined in on the  South Quay stretch to Wrightson Road where Lewis recalled Marsden told  him:”Mr Lewis, it takes two hands to clap. You are doing your part, we  the athletes must do ours.”
 The Lewis-led group proceeded to the 24-mile mark onto Ariapita Avenue then north to Cipriani Boulevard, past the 25-mile mark.
Lewis’  son, Aasan with his group of national 7s rugby team members, who had  earlier completed the marathon, tacked back to join Lewis on the Queen’s  Park West stretch to QRC. And on the final stretch to Whitehall,  Richardson had started a chant “T&T, we want gold!” accompanied by  the chorus of followers, all the way across the line.
“I am glad it  (the walk) resonated so deeply with the public and it just goes to show  there are still wonderful and tremendous people in this country who want  to see the country progress,” Lewis said in a post-race interview.  Lewis will be hoping the expressed goodwill converts into sustainable,  tangible financial support, for T&T athletes in the coming years.
