The Standard (St. Catharines)

Bishop-nriagu says future success will be due to Fairall

‘I know he’s there,’ runner says of ex-coach, ‘Big Dawg,’ who died recently of brain disease

- LORI EWING

Melissa Bishop-nriagu kept every training program coach Dennis Fairall had written for her over the decade the two had worked together.

And so, when Bishop-nriagu returned to the track after becoming a mom in 2018, and Fairall’s health was deteriorat­ing, Victoria coach and exercise physiologi­st Trent Stellingwe­rff took over coaching duties.

But it’s all based on Fairall’s impressive body of work.

“We kept Dennis in the loop as much as we could, and asked questions where we could, but we have a wealth of informatio­n from Dennis,” BishopNria­gu said.

The University of Windsor coaching great died Nov. 6 of progressiv­e supranucle­ar palsy, a rare degenerati­ve brain disease. Fairall — or “Big Dawg” to his athletes — was 67.

Bishop-nriagu saw Fairall, who was diagnosed in 2013, a couple of weeks before he died, “and he knew exactly who I was. He held my hand so tight, and his eyes got so big,” she said, fighting back tears.

The 32-year-old from Eganville, Ont., is in Victoria to train with Stellingwe­rff, as the two make the most of an Olympic year derailed by COVID-19.

“I’m very fortunate I’m an 800 runner, I can do the majority of the work I need outside. If it’s really terrible weather, I can jump on a treadmill, I don’t need equipment. I don’t need poles. I don’t need a pit to jump into,” she said.

Bishop-nriagu and husband Osi built a gym in their basement, serendipit­ous that they finished it right before the global pandemic hit. “We tried to get a stand, like a tree to hold weight plates, and you couldn’t even get that (once COVID-19 hit). You couldn’t get dumbbells, it was wild,” she said.

One of the biggest challenges was finding tracks to train on. Bishop-nriagu hopped a few high school fences, “which was illegal, but we never got arrested so it was fine,” she laughed.

She worked with Don Garrod, who coached alongside Fairall for years.

“He was my eyes on the ground because Trent was all the way in Victoria,” BishopNria­gu said.

Eight months out from the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, and with COVID-19 cases still climbing in North America and numerous other countries, the racing schedule remains a huge question mark.

While there are a couple of big indoor meets in the United States early in the new year, crossing the border is out of the question, she said, considerin­g the federal government’s travel restrictio­ns.

“My gut feeling is that it’s really going to be dependent on what’s happening with COVID around the world, so I think we can plan for (races), but they need to be in pencil, they can’t be set in stone yet,” BishopNria­gu said.

“The trouble we run into is when we come back to Canada. I have to quarantine for two weeks, and that completely undoes all the work that we’ve been working towards. So, I don’t know how we’re going to manage it.”

Bishop-nriagu, the 2015 world silver medallist, took some time off after the postponeme­nt of the Olympics was announced last March.

“I felt like I was like mourning something, and what got me out of it was just moving again and exercising, it kind of brought me out of that like sluggish feeling,” she said.

The middle-distance star has workout advice for anyone feeling overwhelme­d by the pandemic. The key is making time for self-care.

“It’s so easy to sit down and be at your desk and do so much work and, the next thing you know, it’s four o’clock, and you don’t have any time to work out,” she said. “Carving out that time for yourself to work out, just even get outside for a walk can be really helpful.”

She suggests HIIT — high-intensity interval training — workouts.

“They take like 30 minutes, you hurt so much after, but it’s literally just 30 minutes out of your day, you get the blood moving, and you’ll be sore, but don’t be afraid to have an Advil

or something to curb those muscle aches. That’ll get you to the next workout. And it’ll help your mental health, just being able to move.”

The messaging around Canadian athletes heading to Tokyo has been about resiliency, making the best of a bad situation. But Bishop-nriagu said, realistica­lly, it’s not that simple. In a NON-COVID season, she’d be heading south in a few weeks for warm-weather training. That’s off the table now.

“It is up to us how we train for this and how we handle the situation, how we choose to handle it,” she said. “But, on the other hand, a lot of us don’t have the resources to do that. With no gyms open or no physio or no budget to be anywhere, to get that training, it can be very difficult.

“There are limitation­s. But I

do agree that you have to make your mindset that ‘Yes, I will do this whatever way I can,’ ” she said.

Bishop-nriagu had her sights set on the podium at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, in a race she dedicated to Fairall and their journey.

She finished fourth, and choked back tears afterward.

She’ll head to Tokyo without Big Dawg, but said “Dennis will always be with me.

“Dennis taught me so much about the sport and really got me to where I am today. Any success I have from this point forward is because of Dennis,” she said.

“He laid the foundation. And I know what he would say to me, lining up on that start line. And, as long as I keep that with me, I think we’ll be OK. I know he’s there.”

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Melissa Bishop-nriagu, right, races against Madeleine Kelly (8) and Lindsey Butterwort­h (4) in the 800-metre final July 27, 2019, at the Canadian Track and Field Championsh­ips in Montreal.
RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Melissa Bishop-nriagu, right, races against Madeleine Kelly (8) and Lindsey Butterwort­h (4) in the 800-metre final July 27, 2019, at the Canadian Track and Field Championsh­ips in Montreal.
 ?? RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? “Dennis will always be with me,” says Melissa Bishop-nriagu of her former coach, Dennis Fairall. “Dennis taught me so much about the sport and really got me to where I am today.”
RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO “Dennis will always be with me,” says Melissa Bishop-nriagu of her former coach, Dennis Fairall. “Dennis taught me so much about the sport and really got me to where I am today.”

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