Craig Maxwell completed his mammoth Wales Coast Path Cancer Challenge yesterday afternoon after 26 days walking the length of Wales.
The dad of two, who was diagnosed with incurable and inoperable EGFR+ lung cancer in September 2022, walked the Wales v France match ball, which he had carried on his back throughout the challenge, onto the pitch to a standing ovation from the crowd of over 71,000 fans. He was joined by his wife Tracey, daughter Isla and son Zach.
With £877,000 already raised, the former WRU commercial director is aiming to raise a monumental £1m for the Maxwell Family Fund, a fund as part of Velindre Cancer Centre, to enhance, improve and develop the cancer pathway in Wales.
600 walkers signed up to support Craig on the 26-day challenge, which covered 780 miles of the coast path to represent the 78 days it took Craig to receive his diagnosis from the point of finding his tumour. The rest of the 870-mile coast path was cycled. It was done in 26 days to mirror the QuicDNA project, a genomics research project to reduce diagnosis time for lung cancer patients to a maximum of 26 days.
Starting on 14th February, his journey saw him walk the North Wales coast, around Anglesey, the Llyn Peninsula, down the Ceredigion and Pembrokeshire coast, around the Carmarthenshire coast and Gower and along the south Wales coast to the stadium in Cardiff.
During the challenge, he was joined by a host of celebrities including TV presenter Gethin Jones, comedian Rhod Gilbert, weatherman Derek Brockway and former rugby players Sam Warburton, Jamie Roberts and Josh Navidi. Former England cricket captain Sir Andrew Strauss also joined for a leg, having lost his wife Ruth to lung cancer in 2018.
On the last day, Sunday 11th March, he walked from Barry to Cardiff, stopping at Penarth, where he received a rapturous welcome from his hometown, including Penarth RFC’s junior rugby team, whom he coaches. Walking through Cardiff to the stadium, he received a warm welcome from Welsh and French fans, before taking the match ball into the stadium ahead of the game. As he walked on, rugby pundit Jonathan Davies, said:
I have been with him on many challenges but he is facing the toughest challenge of his life now. What he has done is absolutely phenomenal. You can see how the rugby family comes together. The support he has had. He has done this to show his children that even in the darkest times you can be a force for good. This guy is an absolute inspiration.