The Niagara Falls Review

Bishop-Nriagu eyes Tokyo after baby

- LORI EWING

MONTREAL — It was an endearing sight that played out at the University of Windsor Stadium numerous times during Melissa Bishop-Nriagu’s comeback.

The 800-metre runner pounding around the blue and gold Alumni Field track. Husband Osi Nriagu making a diagonal beeline across the infield, one hand pushing a stroller, the other holding a stopwatch.

Bishop-Nriagu will be gunning to regain her national title at the Canadian track and field championsh­ips this week after sitting out last season to give birth to daughter Corinne, who turned a year old earlier this month. Becoming a mom has given her a different perspectiv­e, better balance and made her more efficient in her training. And Bishop-Nriagu believes she’ll be the faster for it.

“I don’t think I’m at my best yet,” said the Eganville, Ont., native. “I think being a mom, I have a little more strength now. I don’t know what it is but when you — and I’m speaking to the moms here — when you have a baby, you’re just extra strong and I’m really excited to see what else we can do leading up to Tokyo (2020 Olympics).”

The 2015 world silver medallist was pleasantly surprised how quickly she bounced back from pregnancy. She started doing alternate run/walk workouts six weeks after Corinne was born. She had zero trouble losing the extra baby weight, in fact she’s had to work to keep weight on.

“I lost it so fast nursing and training,” she said. “As a mom, your time is so focused on your child, sometimes feeding (yourself ) and sleeping, those aren’t my priorities anymore, and that’s been the struggle, keeping my needs as an athlete a priority, but also Corinne’s. I have to do both if I want to succeed in this career.”

Her return to the track has been a group effort. Her longtime coach Dennis Fairall, who was inducted into Athletics Canada’s Hall of Fame on Wednesday, is battling progressiv­e supranucle­ar palsy, a degenerati­ve brain disease. Fairall still attends workouts, weather permitting, his wife Janet unloading his wheelchair from their black SUV.

Trent Stellingwe­rff, a Victoria-based sports physiologi­st, is writing her training programs. Her husband, who took paternity leave (because maternity leave for athletes doesn’t exist), has been her timer.

“Oftentimes I would be running around the track and I’d see him pushing this red stroller across the field trying to get my splits at 200 (the 200-metre mark),” BishopNria­gu said, laughing.

Sports is full of successful mom stories. Tennis superstar Serena Williams is among the most recent high-profile athletes to return to competitio­n after giving birth.

Nia Ali, girlfriend of Canadian sprint star Andre De Grasse, is running the 100metre hurdles at the U.S. championsh­ips this weekend. Ali and De Grasse became parents to daughter Yuri last summer, Ali’s second child.

Bishop-Nriagu, who turns 31 next week, had a solid start to her comeback, running two minutes 1.10 seconds in an 800 in June, but has since been dealing with a minor hamstring injury. She’ll battle last year’s national champion Lindsey Butterwort­h at Claude Robillard Stadium on Saturday.

That race will go a long way to determinin­g what the next few weeks will look like. Bishop-Nriagu, who was fourth at the 2016 Rio Olympics, doesn’t yet have a fast enough time to secure a lane in major internatio­nal meets like the Diamond League series.

Bishop-Nriagu was asked twice in interviews Thursday if she’d considered retiring since her daughter was born.

Her answer was a definitive no. Not once.

“I’m ready to run fast again, I still love it, I still have that drive ... I’m still on this straight and narrow path of my goals of Tokyo 2020, and Corinne is a boost, she’s an absolute boost to be around,” she said.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Runner Melissa Bishop-Nriagu will be gunning to regain her national title at the Canadian track and field championsh­ips after sitting out last season to give birth to daughter Corinne.
RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS Runner Melissa Bishop-Nriagu will be gunning to regain her national title at the Canadian track and field championsh­ips after sitting out last season to give birth to daughter Corinne.

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