The former Kilgetty cricketer and footballer, died prematurely of natural causes at the age of 32 last year whilst working in the Middle East.
During the '90s Huw Lewis had been a member of the Kilgetty cricket team which won the Harrison-Allen Bowl and a member of the Kilgetty football team which won the second Division Cup.
There will be a game of football on Sunday morning and a game of cricket in the afternoon.
The football match will start at 11.30 am and the Kilgetty team will be selected from a squad of players who played in the Cup Finals with Carew providing the opposition.
The Kilgetty squad will be Mark Poole, Gwyn Lewis, Barry Lewis, Steve Smith, Gary Lumley, Bobby Bevan, Neil Proctor, Dean Rossiter, Paul Mansbridge, Jonny Lewis, Paul Tynan, Jonathan Hicks, Dale Elms, Grant James, Paul Hancock, Tim Simmons, Danny Ortiz and Mike Lewis.
The Carew squad will be Ian Kerrison, James Longster, David Lewis, Steve Keating, Brian Hicks, Adam Chandler, Neil Morgan, Daryl John, Nick Shelmerdine, Paul Bullock, Robert Scourfield, Neilson Cole, Richard Bullock, Tim Hicks, Carl Wainwright and Sam Goodwin.
The referee will be Iwan (Yogi) Davies and the linesmen will be Colin Williams and David Phillips.
The cricket match will start at 2.30 pm and will consist of Kilgetty players who played in the three Harrison-Allen Bowl Finals during the '90s, and they will play against a Pembrokeshire guest teams skippered by Steve Cole, of Carew.
The Kilgetty squad will be Peter Johnson, Jonathan Griffiths, Paul Mansbridge, Simon Wood, Graham Jenkins, Phil Jones, Ian Poole, Mark Wood, Adrian Griffiths, Nick Evans, Jonny Lewis and Christian Phillips.
The Pembrokeshire Guest Eleven will be Steve Cole, Nick Scourfield, Darren Thomas, Ian Sefton, Brian Hall, Gethin Evans and Robert Scourfield of Carew, David Parcell and Steve Cook of Saundersfoot, Hywel Gibbs of Lamphey and Phil Kidney of Manorbier.
The cricket match will be played under the same rules as the Harrison-Allen Bowl. The umpires will be Barry Wood and Tony Scourfield and scorers will be Rose Jenkins and Hazel Poole.
It is intended that the football and cricket matches will be played on an annual basis and two Memorial Shields have been donated by the Kilgetty Football Club and the Kilgetty Cricket Club.
Apart from being played in memory of Huw Lewis, it is also intended that the matches will raise money for the CRY charity through raffles, a race night, a pig roast and an auction. CRY is the abbreviated form for Cardiac Risk in the Young.
It was discovered that Huw died as a result of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM). This is just one form of cardiac condition that causes sudden death syndrome (SDS). SDS, the result of heart abnormalities, kills eight young people a week in the UK, most of them seemingly fit and many actively involved in sport.
The CRY web-site states 'Sudden Death Syndrome is the term, which is now used to describe unexpected and unexplained death occurring in apparently healthy young people.
When the heart is examined by an expert pathologist a probable cardiac cause of death is found in the majority.
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common cause of sudden death in those under 30 years of age. It is a relatively uncommon heart disease although is estimated that 10,000 people in the United Kingdom have the condition.
In a healthy heart, heartbeats result from electrical signals starting at the top and passing down through the heart. HCM is a disease, which interrupts these vital electrical signals, which keep the heart beating. It is an incurable disease, which causes excessive thickening of the myocardium (the muscle in the heart).
Heart muscle may thicken in individuals who have high blood pressure or who have prolonged athletic training, but in HCM patients the muscle thickens without an obvious cause.
HCM was first recognised in the late 1950s and has been known by a number of names, 'hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy', 'idiopathic hypertrophic sub-aortic stenosis' and 'muscular sub-aortic stenosis', but it is generally referred to as HCM'.
The recent death of the footballer Marc Viven Foe is thought to be due to a form of SDS. Also, Daniel Yorath, son of Terry Yorath, died of this condition at the age of 15 whilst playing football.
In addition to team-mates and friends from Pembrokeshire, other people attending on Sunday will include Sarah, Bethan, Molly (wife and daughters); Graham and Helen (father and mother); Jonny, Sian, Becky (brother and sisters with partners); Eirian, Janet, Molly Lewis (uncle, aunt and cousin); Paul and Angharad Hillier (uncle and cousin); Jean and Brian (mother-in-law and partner); Dave and Angela, Mike and Kirsten (brothers-in-law and wives); friends of Huw and Jonny from Bournemouth University and Swansea University, together with friends and colleagues from the Middle East and former Kilgetty players now living away, including Jonny Hicks and Danny Ortiz.
Anyone wishing to make donations to the charity can forward the donations to the Kilgetty Sports Club.
In addition, Huw's brother Jonathan (Jonny) Lewis and Tim Simmons (a close friend of Huw from their days at Bournemouth University) will be running in the 2004 London Marathon on behalf of CRY.
The two runners are looking for sponsorship which can be accepted up until March, next year.