 Veteran marathoner Curtis Cox is urging racing officials to make changes that will help revive the discipline locally.
Veteran marathoner Curtis Cox is urging racing officials to make changes that will help revive the discipline locally.After  the Trinidad and Tobago International Marathon (TTIM) on Sunday, Cox  stated that organisers need to attract more local marathon runners and  provide incentives to improve the quality of T&T’s current crop.
The  47-year-old, who won the TTIM in 2005, lamented that he was the first  local to finish the race this year, having trained mostly for the  half-marathon.
Only in the final three weeks, Cox decided  to switch to the full marathon, where he placed seventh, clocking two  hours, 48 minutes and 12 seconds.
“I don’t want to be  disrespectful,” Cox said. “I just trained for the half-marathon and came  back and finished in the top ten. That says something about marathon  running in Trinidad. I’m hoping that the organisers can do something to  revive marathon running in Trinidad so the locals will improve.”
Having  seen the race dominated by Kenyan runners over the last  decade—interrupted on a few occasions, including this year by Colombian  Juan Cardona—Cox is hoping to see greater emphasis placed on locals.
“They’re supposed to have prizes for the locals only, incentives,” he said.
“Because  last year, the first prize was $19,000, this year it was $15,000. So  the prizes keep dropping every year and that is not good. It also had  less participants in the marathon this year.”
One of the  culprits, Cox felt, was the parallel running of the half-marathon with  the marathon. Many runners who previously competed in the 26.2-mile  marathon are now keener to run the shorter distance.
He feels the latter can be used as a December warm-up event to the full marathon.
Cox  also revealed his decision to run the full marathon at a late stage was  in honour of his friend and former training partner Dana Seetahal.
On  Facebook yesterday, Cox indicated that it was Seetahal who took him to  the start line in 2005, when he enjoyed his maiden win.
Seetahal, herself an avid marathon runner, was tragically gunned down in May last      year.
