With all the recent negativety within
athletics, I hope this blog shows the purer side to our sport!
Avoiding the obvious links to Qatar and the World Cup – I want to
keep this positive for once!
I had hoped to travel to Qatar and
surprise my mum for her birthday but unfortunately, I had to delay my
trip – by a week or so – due to the fact I am still currently
hobbling around, with a broken ankle! Things haven't been easy for
the McColgan clan over the last few years but I am extremely proud of
the way my family has coped with the huge changes. My mum is an
extremely strong woman, which many of you already know and has been a
huge influence to me over the years.
She now resides in Qatar with her
second husband, John. She moved out there with absolutely nothing but
within one year has built up - from scratch - a brilliant athletics
club for young kids living out in Doha. Sport and Qatar are two words
that are rarely intertwined, unless it involves the World Cup! But my
mum has truly given young girls (and boys) the chance to be a part of
something, a team. The Doha Athletics Club runs three days a week and
takes kids of all ages. She also runs a mini athletics group, for
kids under the age of 9, that are wanting to get started! It's lovely
to see how much the kids enjoy it. They love being part of a 'team'
and have a great social side – meeting up outside of the club
aswell as going along to see their friends each week. They all share
the same passion – running! Each week, they practice different
track sessions, drills, stretching and core work. It's an opportunity
that they would not have received otherwise. Hopefully, with a little
funding or support from companies or sponsors, the club can also open
doors to races (something many of the kids has never done before) and
potentially racing other schools abroad in Oman and Dubai.
The group mainly train indoors at this
time of the year, as outside temperatures are hitting that of which I
have only ever seen on an oven! The faciities at the Aspire Academy
are brilliant and my mum has managed to secure use of a two-laned
indoor 'track', hidden in the basement, underneath the main 200m
indoor track. It's not exactly the ritz of tracks but the squad make
the best of it and take it in their stride. The basement track is
completely enclosed and so it provides the kids with a completely
secure enviroment to train and also allows them to wear (within
reason) whatever sports clothes they want. On the track outdoors –
they have to be covered as much as possible, which can be extremely
difficult in heat, in excess of 42 degrees!
I took the chance to film the kids
taking part in their sessions and interviewed them with a few simple
questions – why do you like runnning? What do you like about the
club? Will you run in the future? The answers I received were
hilarious. Children provide such honesty and I was totally
overwhelmed with their responses. It was evident how much they all
loved running. From kids hoping to be the next batch of future
Olympians to others just wanting to keep fit and healthy – it
really was insipring. With all the negativity regarding athletics at
the moment, it was really nice to see athletics at it's purest –
kids, putting one foot in front of the other, pushing themselves, all
because they love the thrill of running.
The funniest answer I received all day
was from a young, eight year old girl. I asked her how running could
help her in the future – which for an eight year old was probably a
little bit demanding! But she was brillaint. Intelligent and
extremely articulate for her young years. She answered that, “running
could help her in the future because if there was ever a fire”,
that she could “run away fast”. Hilarious. It was also amazing to
see how much respect she had for my mum as her 'Coach Liz'. It was
heartwarming to see the impact that my mum is having on the group and
probably something I never truly appreciated in the past as a kid –
they all really look up to her.
They
have an immense respect for 'Coach Liz' and I believe athletics not
only helps with the basics of keeping healthy and fit but it also
instills discipline into the children. It was obvious to see how
highly the children regarded my mums advice and I loved the chance to
meet them all – they were a brilliant, engaging, friendly bunch.
In my first visit to Qatar last year, I
witnessed the first time EVER that a young female athlete was allowed
to complete in an indoor race alongside boys being in attendance.
Back home we would find this ludicrous! But Qatar is a deeply
religious country and so it is important to respect their morals. I
am glad to see a glimmer of change though with the World
Championships coming to Qatar in 2019 – with regards to women’s
sport – things need to change. I believe my mum is at the forefront
of that and really building dreams for kids that wouldn't have known
the importance of athletics – keeping fit, creating goals and
making life-long friends. I couldn't be any prouder.
Below is a video I filmed of my time
with the group – it's a little rushed and a few mistakes (but it
was done in my final hour before leaving Qatar!!).
© Eilish McColgan and www.eilishmccolgan.blogspot.com, 2015.