The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Curler Vicky returning to NHS frontline to help with health crisis.

Team Muirhead member working as nurse again in fight against coronaviru­s

- ERIC NICOLSON enicolson@thecourier.co.uk

Eve Muirhead and her curling team could have been returning from Canada today with World Championsh­ip gold medals in their hand luggage.

The rapid escalation of the coronaviru­s pandemic dashed those dreams, however, and also wiped out the rest of their season.

Vicky Wright is the most recent addition to the Scottish Championsh­ipwinning quartet, taking time out of her career as a general surgical ward nurse, based at Forth Valley Larbert Hospital, to become a full-time athlete on the British Curling elite programme.

Now, with no competitio­ns to prepare for until after the summer, the 26-yearold has decided to go back on to the NHS frontline to play her part in dealing with a health crisis that threatens to overwhelm the country.

Priorities have been realigned and night shifts are about to become the norm again.

“When we flew into Prince George after a few days training in Vancouver we were starting to become aware that the worldwide situation was changing and a few doubts and uncertaint­y about whether our champs would go ahead started to creep in,” said Wright.

“We started seeing other big Canadian sporting events being cancelled and it became more evident then that our champs probably wouldn’t go ahead.

“We were out for lunch when we got the email and we went straight back to the hotel and it started to hit home, the combinatio­n of the disappoint­ment, but also awareness that public health had to be the priority.

“It was a weird situation and a bit of an emotional rollercoas­ter, and we were absolutely gutted. But we could see how everything was quickly changing and we knew there were other much bigger priorities than sporting events which are now on the back burner.

“They have to take second place to what is happening just now and when I went into work last week at the hospital it really sank in. There were no world champs and the bigger picture was that helping out at home was more important just now.”

When she became a full-time curler Wright managed to keep doing some part-time nursing work when it fitted in around her sporting schedule.

“Being a nurse has always given me a good perspectiv­e on life and kept my focus on what is important,” she said.

“In my nursing career over the years I always felt it was a privilege to be with someone and look after them when they were unwell and vulnerable.

“It has always made me appreciate the life I have, being able to work as a nurse which is a job I love and also compete in curling which is a sport that I love.

“I have always been very lucky that both my work and the British Curling programme both appreciate­d how important both facets were to me.

“My nursing was full-time and I juggled my curling around that, but in July 2019 my curling went full-time. Both the NHS and British Curling enabled me to do one shift a week throughout this season. It was something I really enjoyed and I didn’t want to lose my skills and it was good to have something else other than just curling, it really kept me grounded.”

Wright added: “Once I was home I contacted my supervisor and said I was back and could be available to do whatever I could to help. For now I am picking up an extra two to four shifts per week for the foreseeabl­e.

“There is an amazing team spirit on my ward and as public transport is not an option now we are all helping each other out with lifts and childcare etc.

“There is a really great team spirit and positive approach from everyone and we are taking this all in our stride and we will all pull together.

“We are fully informed and prepared so we are ready and it is nice to know my curling team-mates are so proud of me and want to help me as well in any way they can.”

When curling resumes, the 2022 Winter Olympics will be a bright light at the end of the tunnel and Team Muirhead will be in a strong position.

A European silver medal at the end of 2019 has been backed up with consistent­ly high performanc­es in 2020.

“This season was great for us and we found our feet from the start and we really settled into our positions within the team and we were all committed to the same goals and wanted the same outcomes,” said Wright.

“We started this year with a win at Perth and then followed that up with another win at the Continenta­l Cup (helping Team Europe beat Team Canada on their own ice).

“We felt we were going well and in the right direction and our coach Kristian Lindström joined us in the January and was a really welcome addition and has had to hit the ground running.

“However now it is time to make a difference in a different way and I will now play my part in a much bigger team.

“I am very fortunate that I am getting all the support I can from the British Curling programme and (strength and conditioni­ng coach) Harry Booker has developed a programme for me around my shifts so I have a routine.

“I find it incredibly important to have a plan and a routine for the week so I can incorporat­e my training goals around my work. Everyone can benefit from setting themselves a plan of action just now and targets for the next few weeks that they can achieve.

“I love my job and I love my curling so having that balance and flexibilit­y really is the best case scenario for me. It is why I do it and why I need it and I am just so grateful both parties see the benefits.”

Once I was home I contacted my supervisor and said I was back and could be available to do whatever I could to help.

VICKY WRIGHT

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