Charlotte, Alan Brookes helped prop up road racing community during pandemic
TORONTO — Charlotte Brookes will be stationed in the command centre when the starter’s pistol sounds on the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon 10K race Sunday.
She expects there will be tears.
Sunday marks the largest road race in Canada since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and marks a triumphant live return — finally — of a running community that Charlotte and her dad Alan Brookes have helped keep propped up for the past 20 months.
“I’m tearing up (even now),” Brookes laughed, during a Zoom interview this week. “We had our big event team training last week (on Zoom), someone asked me to do the intro, and I start of with ‘We’re so happy you’re . . . oh God.’ I started crying. Of course, I had to record for people who couldn’t make it. And I’m like, ‘How do we edit me crying?’