The Gazette

Foundation keeps rower’s Olympic dreams alive

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A CHARITABLE movement has helped keep alive the Olympic dreams of a Teesside rower who has vowed to raise the profile of a painful condition that almost wrecked her sporting career.

Teesside Philanthro­pic Foundation’s FAST Fund has hit the £100,000 milestone in donations to 119 of Teesside’s most talented sportspeop­le.

And Beth Bryan was among the local sportspeop­le to receive the latest batch of FAST Fund grants to help her focus on qualifying for Tokyo 2020.

When the 26-year-old discovered she had endometrio­sis, it almost spelled the end of her world-class rowing career.

Beth, who took bronze in both the world and European championsh­ips in the women’s quadruple skull in 2017, lost her Lottery funding due to her inability to train with the painful condition.

That left the former Egglesclif­fe School student short of funds by the time an injection which brings the pain under control was finally found.

So she was ecstatic when Teesside Philanthro­pic Foundation stepped in with a £2,000 Fast Fund grant to enable her to pick up her rowing training.

“The support of the FAST Fund meant the world to me,” said Beth, who regularly returns to her parents’ home in Hartburn from her training base in Henley.

“The funding has enabled me to put money towards training and equipment and membership fees,” she said.

“It has helped to really take the pressure off me. I know I’m capable of going to the Olympics – but I have to be able to train every day to do that, and I can only do that if I don’t have constant financial pressures.

“So it’s helped me make the next step back to where I believe I belong.”

Beth, who runs her own swimming school, is now pain-free, which means she can train again despite continuing to live with endometrio­sis.

She hopes her plight will help raise awareness of the condition, in which tissue which normally lines the uterus grows on other pelvic and abdominal organs and bleeds during a woman’s period, resulting in a web of painful scar tissue.

She said: “I want to talk about it because I want to raise awareness of it to help other female athletes that might be going through the same thing.” “When I started getting pain it was put down to a back injury, but I knew it wasn’t a back injury.” Symptoms of endometrio­sis can include painful periods, pain with bowel movements or urination, excessive bleeding and infertilit­y.

Beth now has dreams of going to Tokyo in 2020 as part of the Great Britain women’s Olympic rowing team.

She said: “The fact it’s been such a hard year has made me stronger and made me work harder than ever to get back to the top.

“I want to earn my place back in the boat for Tokyo.”

The foundation has now shared £104,000 between local sportspeop­le over the past four years through its FAST Fund.

The FAST (Funding Assistance for Sportspeop­le on Teesside) Fund provides grants to sporting achievers who have the talent but not necessaril­y the finances to excel in their chosen field.

A whole host of Teesside sports stars have reaped the benefit of FAST Fund cash since it was set up in 2016, including athletes, swimmers, martial artists, wheelchair rugby players, rowers and tennis and badminton players.

Teesside’s three-times Olympic long jumper Chris Tomlinson sits on a committee which delivers the FAST Fund grants, along with athletics coach Rick Betts, amateur swimming administra­tor Sue Campion and Philanthro­pic Foundation trustees Harriet Spalding and Emily Bentley.

For further details about the FAST Fund and how to apply for a grant, visit fastfund.org. uk.

The fact it’s been such a hard year has made me stronger and made me work harder than ever to get back

to the top.

 ??  ?? Beth Bryan aims to qualify for 2020
DOUG MOODY PHOTOGRAPH­Y
Beth Bryan aims to qualify for 2020 DOUG MOODY PHOTOGRAPH­Y

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