Olympic Swimmer Dylan Carter says now that the Paris 2024 Olympic Games are over it’s time to take stock.
Trinidad and Tobago finished a second consecutive games without a medal. Despite this Carter noted that he and his peers were grateful for the “overwhelming support” they received even while still in Paris.
“It wasn’t the Olympics we dreamed of, I think that’s the elephant in the room,” Carter began during a short address on behalf of the athletes at the airport’s VIP Lounge, on Wednesday, “but I’m very confident that for all of my team-mates on this team and the other athletes in Trinidad and Tobago our best days are ahead of us.”
The three-time Olympian, who gave a frank, reflective interview after his participation at the Aquatics Centre said it was good to be home and after a short rest will begin to search for answers to the hard questions.
“I’m going to sit down with my coach and my team and do a good post-mortem and look back on the past six months, brutally, honestly, and assess how we prepared and how we move forward,” Carter said, “The best way to go forward is to look back and identify where we maybe made mistakes and things we can improve on but first I think a little break is in order for the mind and the body.”
Carter and fellow Olympians sprinters Michelle-Lee Ahye, Akilah Lewis, Devin Augustine, and Elijah Joseph, quarter-miler Renny Quow, and cyclist Nicholas Paul arrived at Piarco International Airport from the French capital on Wednesday evening around 4 pm.
Chef de Mission Lovie Santana-Duke and other officials including Brent Elder, Keisha Fraser, Melanie Gulston, Charles Joseph, Dexter Voisin, Maria Thomas, and Verne Alleyne accompanied the athletes.
Santana-Duke said, despite the results, she and her staff felt, from their first-hand view, that there was no doubt about the contingent’s dedication to the cause.
“I’m proud of each and every one of the athletes that participated and competed at the games with pride and joy,” Santana-Duke asserted, “I wish them all the best on their journey going forward we have a new quadrennial which is about to start and lots of games, and being a young team we expect to see them competing and building, growing and developing for LA 2028.”
Team TTO included several debutants including swimmer Zuri Ferguson and track athletes Lewis, Augustine, Joseph, twins Sanaa and Sole Frederick, Shakeem Mckay, and Jaden Marchan whose first games will serve as a platform for the future of their careers.
Immediate past-president of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) echoed her sentiments on behalf of President Diane Henderson, “Our heartfelt thanks and appreciation for your years of sacrifice, for your blood sweat and tears and for doing in the last two weeks what many people in Trinidad and Tobago have not and cannot do, which is to represent the red, white and black with glory, with honour, with pride, and with patriotism.”