 ...as #10golds24 bandwagon gets rolling
...as #10golds24 bandwagon gets rolling
It’s only natural to be suspicious of Brian Lewis’ motives. This is  a country where walking the talk isn’t a priority, especially among  public figures. So when the president of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic  Committee (TTOC) fulfilled his stated commitment to walking the  marathon distance last week Sunday in launching a fund-raising effort  targeting the next three Summer Olympic Games, it was time to take  notice.
First of all, what planet is this fella on? I  mean, in our history of Olympic participation going back 66-plus years,  there are only two gold medals to show for it. Granted, the second came  at the last edition in London in 2012, but to suggest that Keshorn  Walcott’s out-of-the-blue triumph in the javelin could be the trigger  for an avalanche (for us) of golden success in 2016, 2020 and 2024 is  like the Prime Minister believing this latest matter surrounding the  Attorney General will merely blow over after nine days or so.
Anyway,  as utterly ludicrous as it sounds, the TTOC boss has already managed to  snare some big-name corporate support, with the Guardian Group igniting  the flame of private sector interest to the tune of $250,000. I  actually thought it was a misprint when the information appeared in the  media a week ago. Surely it was $25,000 and not a quarter-of-a-million  dollars. Four others have since come on board, although their  contributions are yet to be publicly disclosed.
Maybe  Lewis should try selling snake oil in his spare time, or bags of party  ice cubes to the Inuit of northern Canada. But his biggest coup, so far,  was to get Hasely Crawford to sprint onto the bandwagon in pursuit of  this ambitious, audacious project.
Anyone with even a  passing interest in the life and times of the nation’s first Olympic  gold medallist would be aware of his increasing bitterness and deepening  sense of hurt over the manner in which he has been treated by  successive governments and the general public since beating Jamaica’s  Don Quarrie to the 100-metre finish line in Montreal, in 1976.
We  can debate long into the night whether or not Crawford’s angst is  justified. But right or wrong, it doesn’t change the fact that the man  has been vex like hell for all sorts of different reasons for almost 40  years. So for him to announce that his Olympic gold medal and the gear  he wore for that historic occasion is to be leased to the TTOC in  support of the #10golds24 Athlete Welfare and Preparation Fund – that’s  the official name of the project – is almost as unexpected as Anand  Ramlogan being contrite and apologetic about anything.
So  what’s really at play here? Granted that as an insurance salesman he  would know a thing or two about making an effective pitch, but how does  he attract so much significant backing so soon when most administrators  in other sports have struggled for years to garner even a fraction of  that support?
As we know only too well, credibility is at  the very heart of the problem when it comes to the Trinidad and Tobago  Football Association, custodians of our most popular sport, to the  extent that potential benefactors prefer to pay third parties to manage  the money rather than let it go to the TTFA directly.
There  are three things we claim to crave but really only demand it of others,  not ourselves: integrity, transparency and accountability. Could it be  that Lewis has convinced enough important people that he is prepared to  abide by those three musketeers of effective, progressive governance in  pursuit of a dream? If so, he has established for himself a dizzyingly  high standard, one that very, very few are prepared to be held up  against for at least the next nine years.
Will we even  remember this ideal of ten golds by 2024 after the flame of the Games of  that year is extinguished? What measurable difference will it make  anyway to basic issues like quality of life or higher ideals like a  sense of nationhood should the goal be attained or surpassed?
Whether  or not you choose to remain sceptical or prefer to give him the benefit  of the doubt, Brian Lewis has put himself out there in a manner few of  us are willing to do. As encouraging as the early signs are, he must  know that it only takes one false move for the whole thing to come  crashing down around him. Rest assured, there are some willing the  venture of fail for nothing more than narrow, selfish motives.
So  stay on the fence if you will, but unless he is exposed as a crook, a  thief and a charlatan, I am prepared to get on board for an exercise  that could only be for the good of the country.
 	