NOWADAYS Wiltshire Council chief executive Andrew Kerr is running an £800m budget.
As a teenager, he was running something very different . . . an athletics track as one of Britain’s Olympic hopefuls.
With less than a year to go until the London 2012 Olympics, Mr Kerr has decided to lead the way in a search for Wiltshire people to be torch bearers for the Olympic flame.
He is dropping his own name into the nominations hat for the coveted role.
Wiltshire Council wants up to 300 volunteers to each run a short distance with the flame next year as it travels along a route through the county.
Details of that route remain top secret, but the 52-year-old council boss is hoping to drum up interest.
Mr Kerr, who lives in Neston, near Corsham, failed in his bid to become an Olympic athelete after illness ended his running career at the age of 24.
In the 1970s he enjoyed a string of sporting successes, having mastered the 400m distance at Scottish, British and European levels. He has 17 Scottish titles to his name.
The father-of-three said: “I got into running because I was useless at football when I was 12.
“By the time I was 15, I had started putting on some muscle and I came second in the Scottish Schools competition in 1974.
“That was the first time I had had some success. Ever since that day I knew I liked winning and I still do.
“At 17 I came first in the National Scottish competitions in the 400m, breaking the 50-second barrier and going on to reach 49 for 400.”
Mr Kerr then went on to break the record for the British under-20s indoor 400m at 48.2 seconds and he also won the outdoor competition. In 1977 he achieved sixth place in the 400m final at the European Junior Championships.
However Mr Kerr collapsed at the 1978 Common- wealth Games trials with glandular fever.
“I just wasn’t well enough to compete,” he added. “I stopped when I was 24 because I seemed to develop a pattern of illness.
“I decided I needed a job, so sadly I never made it in to an Olympic team even though I was good enough.”
Among Mr Kerr’s claims to fame is that he features in the 1981 sporting film Chariots of Fire, where he played on of the athletes who raced the main characters Eric Liddell, played by Ian Charleson, and Harold Abrahams, played by Ben Cross.
He said: “There was a scene where I was supposed to come second in the race, but we just couldn’t get the scene right and had to keep shooting again.
“After 25 takes the actors were, of course, knackered, but as a runner I was fine.
“The Olympics are the greatest sporting event in the world and although I didn’t get there, my passion for sport has given me an awful lot of things in my life.
“It is the reason that I am here at the top of my profession because it gives me drive and I respond well under pressure.
“Having performed in front of 40,000 people in my sporting career it means doing presentations to large groups of people isn’t the nerve-wracking experience it could be.”
Mr Kerr has embarked on a walking and swimming regime in a bid to get fit again, having put on two stone since taking the top post at Wiltshire Council in 2010.
He hopes he will be one of the successful nominees to carry the torch through Wiltshire.
Nominations for Wiltshire torchbearers can be made at www.lloydstsb.com/carry theflame until September 12.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article