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Sunday, June 15, 2025

Lack of money forces Rainbow Cup off sister isle

by

Walter Alibey
38 days ago
20250508
Participants take the start at the Rainbow Tobago Triathlon event recently. However, on June 7 the event will be held on the sister isle of Tobago for the last time due to lack of funding. 

Participants take the start at the Rainbow Tobago Triathlon event recently. However, on June 7 the event will be held on the sister isle of Tobago for the last time due to lack of funding. 

This year’s Rain­bow Cup To­ba­go In­ter­na­tion­al Triathlon Event, sched­uled to take place on June 7, will be the last time it will be held on the sis­ter is­land of To­ba­go.

Or­gan­is­er Ja­son Good­ing said it is just too cost­ly to host the event with­out a spon­sor.

Each year, the event costs Good­ing and Com­pa­ny up­wards of $200 000 to stage, with Good­ing hav­ing to dip in­to his pock­et con­stant­ly every year to en­sure it ma­te­ri­alis­es. “All I can say is that this event on the sis­ter isle of To­ba­go will not be held again,” Good­ing ex­plained, not­ing that he will now fo­cus on the Rain­bow Cup Grena­da, which was held in April of this year.

This year will be the 20th edi­tion of the Rain­bow Cup To­ba­go In­ter­na­tion­al Triathlon, which has grown ex­po­nen­tial­ly from 35-plus par­tic­i­pants the first year it was held at the Grafton Beach Re­sort to well over 300 par­tic­i­pants now at the Cour­land Bay Her­itage Park—af­fec­tion­ate­ly known as Tur­tle Beach.

Good­ing said that while growth is good for the sport, he can no longer main­tain the fi­nan­cial de­mand that comes with it.

“It’s been in­cred­i­bly dif­fi­cult to se­cure the spon­sor­ship need­ed to sus­tain an event of this cal­i­bre,” said Good­ing, a nine-time na­tion­al triathlon cham­pi­on who has called an end to his ca­reer to fo­cus on the man­age­ment of the sport.

“I was ready to end it af­ter 2024, but the com­mit­tee con­vinced me to try one more time. Sad­ly, the sup­port hasn’t ma­te­ri­alised—and I sim­ply can’t con­tin­ue cov­er­ing the costs alone.”

To­day, the Rain­bow Cup at­tracts over 300 triath­letes and hun­dreds more for its thrilling 5K run. It proud­ly serves as both the Na­tion­al Stan­dard Dis­tance Triathlon Cham­pi­onship and the Carif­ta team qual­i­fi­er and is the on­ly com­plet­ed ve­hi­cle-free race in T&T, which Good­ing said is a tes­ta­ment to its com­mit­ment to safe­ty and or­gan­i­sa­tion.

Last year, Blaine Williams sealed the win in the men’s di­vi­sion, turn­ing back Joshua Bridge­mo­han, while Zara Nicholls se­cured the women’s ti­tle. Nicholls got the bet­ter of Is­abelle D’Abadie for the gold medal and re­sult­ing ti­tle.

Grate­ful for the sup­port over the years, Good­ing re­flects on the event’s im­pact, which he said in­cludes de­vel­op­ing youth par­tic­i­pa­tion, host­ing school-based triathlons, duathlons, and aquathlon se­ries, and pro­duc­ing over 60 Carif­ta-ready ath­letes, many of whom com­pete in­ter­na­tion­al­ly.

Good­ing said they have al­so had to stop the in­vi­ta­tion of in­ter­na­tion­al ath­letes for the event.

Look­ing ahead, un­less there’s a ma­jor turn­around in sup­port, Good­ing plans to shift his fo­cus to the Rain­bow Cup Grena­da In­ter­na­tion­al Triathlon, which de­buted in 2024 and con­tin­ued in­to 2025.

“With stronger back­ing from the Gov­ern­ment of Grena­da and a con­ve­nient 35-minute flight from To­ba­go, I hope ath­letes will con­tin­ue their jour­ney there. It’s bit­ter­sweet. This event was born out of a dream shared with my late fa­ther, Ian ‘Bi­gO’ Good­ing. Clos­ing this chap­ter af­ter 20 years will be emo­tion­al—but it’s time,” Good­ing con­clud­ed.


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