After almost a year of waiting on an upgrade for a performance that earned them a bronze medal in the team sprint at the 2025 Junior Pan American Games in Asuncion, Paraguay, the trio of Jelani Nedd, Darnell James, and Ryan D’Abreau finally got the upgrade that their performance deserved, to the second-place silver medal on Monday (June 15) at a medal-upgrade ceremony at the Olympic House on Woodford Street, Port-of-Spain.
This was after the eventual winning team, Colombia, was disqualified after failing an anti-doping test. That development meant that the second-place Mexico was elevated to the first-place gold, and T&T’s 46.216 time in the final, which saw them hold off neighbouring Venezuela, earned them the silver medal.
The Venezuelans were also upgraded to the bronze medal with their time of 47.307, which initially landed them in the fourth-place spot.
Yesterday at the Olympic House, it was a celebration more of the riders’ decision to do the right thing rather than the upgrade of the titles. James, in an immediate response, said, “It’s a very proud moment. We’ve been putting in the work; we’ve been doing what we’re supposed to do by staying clean and doing the right thing. And, you know, the goodness pays off. It’s just time, and it’s just a process.”
Nedd told the audience that his team did not have much time to prepare, but they still captured the Under-23 men’s match sprint title at the National Cycling Centre in Couva on May 18, shattering the national track record. “We didn’t have much time to prepare, team training aside; this was years in the making, training from youth developers and tiny mites going up. So the fact that all of us really got together and we still ended up third and got an upgraded second, so yeah, I am proud of what we’ve achieved.”
Before receiving their silver medals, T&T Olympic Committee (TTOC) president Diane Henderson emphasized that the experience offered a valuable lesson beyond the mere presentation of the medals. Assuring the audience that in sport, as in life, what we see is not always the full picture. ”What appears on the podium, what glitters on the top of the dessert sheets, is not always the truth of what appears.”
As she shared some real-life experiences, Henderson said, “There will be moments in your career when the result does not reflect the effort you gave or the standards you were held to. In those moments, I urge you not to be discouraged. Not to be tempted to cut corners because others appeared to be benefiting from their turn.”
“What you witnessed at this meeting is precisely the lesson taught to Jesus. First, bear with integrity, compete with pride, and trust the King’s word with all of you. Many of you will remember, and for those who do not, know that our men’s 4x100-meter relay team competed in the Beijing Olympic Games and ran a race worthy of the highest honour. Yet it was not until nine years later that the full truth of that performance was formally acknowledged.”
“On the 5th of July, 2022, another five years later, in a special ceremony held at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland, that team was reallocated to gold, the medal that was rightfully theirs. It was a moment of profound vindication, not only for those athletes—Richard Thompson, Keston Bledman, Emmanuel Callender, Mark Burns, and Aaron Armstrong—but also for Trinidad and Tobago and for the principle that clean sport must always be protected.”
She noted further, “Anti-doping protocols are not a building block; they are a promise. A promise to your competitors, to our country, and to yourselves that what you achieve is genuine. We ask all our athletes, now and always, to honour that commitment without exception, because clean sports is not just about what the rules require. It is about who you are when no one is watching and what you want your legacy in this sport to mean.”
The trio is expected to be reunited when the team to represent T&T at the Central American and Caribbean (CAC) Games is chosen soon. The riders will also warm up at the ‘Carnival of Speed’ and ‘Speed Paradise’ events, which will be held over the coming weekend at the National Cycling Centre (NCC) in Balmain, Couva.
