The Province

GIRARD CLEANS UP

White Rock weightlift­er awarded Olympic gold and bronze medals

- ED WILLES ewilles@postmedia.com @willesonsp­orts

The bitterness, Christine Girard will tell you, has dissipated over time and standing here on this day she can only think of the great things her long and complicate­d journey represents.

For starters, she was able to share it with her three children who didn’t understand everything that was going on at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, but knew there was a party involving their mother.

“My four-year-old (son Philip) thought it was my birthday,” Girard said over the phone. “He’s going to be disappoint­ed when my real birthday comes around and the same thing doesn’t happen.”

She was also able to share it with her husband Walter Bailey, who doubled as her coach, trainer and one-man support system in the good times and bad. And there were her parents. And her extended family. And coaches, athletes and administra­tors who knew what this day meant.

But mostly she thought this celebratio­n was a triumph for her values, for drug-free sport and every athlete who resisted an easier path. Six years ago in London, she stood on the podium with a bronze medal around her neck and tears in her eyes and that was a remarkable achievemen­t for the weightlift­er. But this day was about something else. It was about her country, her code and winning the right way. If it was six years too late, so be it.

“It took me a bit of time to accept what I didn’t get, but I can see what I’m getting now and the value of this medal is a lot more,” said Girard. “I’ve got all these opportunit­ies now to tell my story and I’m really proud of that. I have a chance to fight for clean sport.

“This medal doesn’t have the same flavour.”

Even if it’s every bit as sweet.

Girard, the 33-year-old from Rouyn-Noranda, Que., by way of White Rock who now lives in the National Capital Region, was finally awarded the gold medal Monday that should have been hers at the 2012 Olympics. It was a precious moment for this woman and her family and one that received the royal treatment from the Canadian Olympic Committee. But if Girard isn’t resentful about the events that brought her to this place, the rest of the country can be angry for her.

At the London Games, Girard made Canadian Olympic history by winning a bronze in weightlift­ing. It was the first time a Canadian woman had ever medalled in the event, which was its own kind of special. But it was Girard’s backstory that made her performanc­e memorable.

Then 27, her training centre was a quasi-gym Walter, an RCMP officer, had constructe­d in the garage of their home in White Rock.

Then came London. Four years after a crushing fourthplac­e finish in Beijing — more on that later — she won the bronze in the 63-kilogram class by lifting twice her body weight, then set an unofficial Olympic record for most consecutiv­e hugs. She met with the assembled reporters afterward, still glowing, and was asked by a francophon­e reporter if she considered herself an Ontarian, a Quebecer or a British Columbian.

Girard flashed her fingernail­s that had alternatel­y been painted red and white and said: “Je suis une Canadienne.”

“She’s gone through so many challenges in the last four years to get to where she is today,” her husband said at the time. “A lesser person would have given up 100 times.”

But that was just Chapter 1 of her story. In the ensuing years, the IOC would retest some 1,500 urine samples from the Beijing and London Games and uncover positive tests for the two lifters who finished ahead of Girard: Kazakhstan’s Maiya Maneza and Russia’s Svetlana Tsarukayev­a. That was in 2016. After the perfunctor­y appeals, Girard learned this April she had won gold. The award ceremony was finally held six months later.

Girard’s fourth-place finish in Beijing, meanwhile, had also been promoted to a bronze and the two medals resulted in a $30,000 payday from the COC. But that didn’t compensate fully for the missed opportunit­y in London. A gold in 2012 would have made her an instant celebrity and increased the funding for weightlift­ing exponentia­lly. It would have changed her life.

“I think the frustratio­n has been processed,” Walter said. “We’re at a different stage in our lives now. The time has helped.”

Her life changed in its own way. She retired from weightlift­ing, became a coach and a mother and now an advocate for clean sport. She said the last couple of weeks have allowed her to revisit her former life as an athlete and that was fun. But it didn’t sound like she was in a hurry to return.

“I made peace with that life,” she said.

She was speaking a few minutes after a prolonged photo-op in Ottawa. After the formal photos were taken with various dignitarie­s, her kids — daughter Aliana, 2, and nine-month-old Samuel round out the roster — climbed up on the podium and posed for the cameras.

“They liked showing off,” their mother said with a laugh. “They didn’t understand it, but one day they’ll be able to look at those pictures.”

And they’ll see a Canadian heroine.

I’ve got all these opportunit­ies now to tell my story and I’m really proud of that. I have a chance to fight for clean sport.” Christine Girard

 ?? —CP ?? Canadian weightlift­er and mother of three Christine Girard holds up the gold and bronze Olympic medals she was awarded during a ceremony Monday in Ottawa.
—CP Canadian weightlift­er and mother of three Christine Girard holds up the gold and bronze Olympic medals she was awarded during a ceremony Monday in Ottawa.
 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ex-Canadian weightlift­er Christine G irard lets daughter Aliana show off the gold medal she was presented during a ceremony Monday in Ottawa. Girard was awarded 2012 Olympic gold and 2008 bronze medals after the IOC disqualifi­ed athletes from those games.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Ex-Canadian weightlift­er Christine G irard lets daughter Aliana show off the gold medal she was presented during a ceremony Monday in Ottawa. Girard was awarded 2012 Olympic gold and 2008 bronze medals after the IOC disqualifi­ed athletes from those games.
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