Irish Daily Mail

Gormley playing on after fight for her life

- By CLIONA FOLEY

NOELLE GORMLEY is grateful just to be part of the Sligo squad for tomorrow’s TG4 Connacht intermedia­te final after recovering from a terrifying football-related illness that left her life in sudden danger. The St Nathy’s veteran won an All-Ireland junior medal in 2006 and a Division 3 title three years ago and, in her 14th year in the county jersey, was still playing well enough to get a TG4 All-Star nomination last year and chuffed to get her first callup for the All-Stars’ trip to Thailand last March. But even before the touring party had landed home, the Sligo goalkeeper was feeling unwell and events then took a shocking twist. ‘I thought it was just jet-lag, I was feeling very lethargic and couldn’t eat. I hadn’t eaten really for 10 days. ‘We got home on a Friday, I went to the doctor on Saturday and into hospital for tests on Sunday and suddenly I was rushed into a side-room and told I was heading for kidney failure,’ she reveals. ‘I took a normal knock in the match, played on, everything was fine. If the injury had happened here I’d have been fine but because of the heat my kidneys went into shock and weren’t filtrating,’ she explains. ‘My creatinine was through the roof and so was my potassium, which can result in cardiac arrest. I went through 18 bags of fluid initially and then it was a waiting game.’ Gormley got out of hospital nine days later but is on a long-term recovery plan to regain her full kidney function and has just returned to work after needing over two months off to recover from lifethreat­ening illness. ‘I have tests every two week, you feel like a bit of a lab rat but my consultant has been brilliant,’ she says. ‘Every day is a challenge because you’re adapting to the medication and the tiredness levels. I went from training six nights a-week to not even being able to walk because it was changing my blood and I had no energy. ‘I’ve got back training and doing a little bit collective­ly but it all depends on how I wake up,’ the Sligo stalwart explains. ‘Some days I go to training and can’t. Other days I get this burst of energy and just have to train. In terms of where I’ve come from it was very scary and probably far worse for those around me, my family especially.’ Her football family rallied round her but one unexpected source of support is a piece of technology which the LGFA has just signed up to use and is supplying free to their players. FitrWoman, an app designed by scientists and performanc­e experts Orreco (founded in Ireland), allows athletes to track their menstrual cycle and customise and maximise training to their fluctuatin­g metabolism during it. As one of the LFGA ambassador­s for FitrWoman, Gormley got early access to it. ‘I downloaded it a month ago. It’s really good for getting the best out of your body and I’m already using it to help me get back. ‘It’s been a long road but my aim is to put my jersey back on for Sligo.’

 ?? ?? Scare: Sligo star Noelle Gormley was headed for kidney failure
Scare: Sligo star Noelle Gormley was headed for kidney failure

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