Lethbridge Herald

Girard confirmed as Olympic champ

CANADA’S CHRISTINE GIRARD NAMED OLYMPIC WEIGHTLIFT­ING CHAMPION BY IOC

- Donna Spencer

Christine Girard is reconnecti­ng with the version of herself who lifted twice her body weight over her head at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

The businesswo­man, weightlift­ing coach and mother of three children will be crowned Olympic champion years later.

The women ahead of her stripped of gold and silver months ago for doping violations, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee has confirmed the medal redistribu­tion of the women’s 63-kilogram class and Girard’s promotion from bronze to gold.

“It feels like it’s been so long,” Girard told The Canadian Press on Thursday. “I look at videos and pictures that pop up on my Facebook and it really feels like it was another life.”

Girard will receive not only her gold medal from 2012, but also a belated bronze from the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, at a ceremony to be organized by the Canadian Olympic Committee at a later date.

“Yes, it’s overdue, but the message of my medals is now so much stronger,” she said. “I want that moment to be not just for me. I want it for us. It’s a huge win for our country and for clean sport.”

Girard is Canada’s first Olympic champion in weightlift­ing and the first Canadian to win a pair of medals in the sport.

“She is a weightlift­ing trailblaze­r in so many ways and we are extremely proud of her,” COC president Tricia Smith said in a statement.

“Christine has always lived the values of sport and of competing clean. We are so pleased to see her finally receive the Olympic gold medal which she has so rightfully earned.”

Girard, 33, was born in Elliot Lake, Ont., but grew up in Rouyn-Noranda, Que.

She and husband Walter Bailey moved to White Rock, B.C., in 2009. They co-founded the Kilophile Weightlift­ing Club in Surrey, B.C., in 2012.

Girard gave birth to their third child — a son — in March. The family is moving to Aylmer, Que., in June for Bailey’s job in Ottawa with the RCMP.

The medals — when Girard gets them — will feel like a bridge back to the woman who grimaced with determinat­ion as she hoisted 133 kilograms off the mat at the ExCel exhibition centre in London.

“It does feel a bit funny to know that Christina that was in another life will actually get the medals, too,” Girard said.

More than 1,500 samples from Beijing and London were re-tested in 2016.

A total of 65 sanctions involving 40 medals were imposed from the Beijing Games, and 45 sanctions impacted 20 medals in London, according to the IOC.

Olympic weightlift­ing medals are determined by the sum of each lifter’s best result in the snatch and the clean and jerk, with three attempts allowed in each.

Girard’s winning total was 236 kilograms. Kazakhstan’s Maiya Maneza and Russia’s Svetlana Tzarukaeva were disqualifi­ed for testing positive for steroids, according to the IOC.

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