When she heard the news, Nadia Power refused to believe it. The Dubliner had been walking on air, beaming with pride as she left the trackin Gavle, Sweden last July, having won the first major international medal of her career.
A bronze over 800m at the European U-23 Athletics Championships, something she’d worked towards for years – something which was about to be snatched from her grasp. Powerhad already done a delighted interviewand posed for pictures when an official called her aside, his expressiontelling her the story before the words did: she’d been disqualified. Rule 163.2: obstruction. Power racked her brain, trying to figure out what she’d done wrong, but came up empty. She was shown a replay of an incident halfway through the race, when Britain’s JemmaReekie movedacross in front of her entering a bend, at which point Power put her arms out to protect her space. An eagle-eyed official had been standing at that point and that was it: Power’s name dropped from third to last on the results sheet: DQ.
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Irish team managersRichard Rodgers and Paul McNamara put in an appeal, and Power tried her best to put up a front while it played out. “I didn’t let anything out, but inside I was hysterical,” she says.“I was devastated. Everyone was avoiding looking at me; they knew I was in the worst state ever.”TheIrish managementapproached the British team, explaining how their appeal would argue that the obstruction Power caused to Reekie had little or no effectgiven the Briton went on to win gold. “Jemma was so good,” says Power. “She went to the officials and said,‘I felt nothing, I wasn’t impeded.’”All the while, Power sat with teammate Louise Shanahan who’d been a supportive presence in a time of great stress. More than 90 minutes later, Rodgers approached Power with good news: she was, once again, a European medallist. The stadium was empty when she finally got to stand on the rostrum, and Power’s chief memory after thatwas “wanting to get on the bus and hide in case someone came after me again”. There was something different about that championship. Power was 21 at the time, and was just about done with showing up to these things to simply take part. In 2013 she was fifth in the European Youth Olympic final over 1500m. Two years later she got her first taste of the big time at the World U18 Championships in Colombia, but Power failed to finish after being tripped inher 1500m heat. In 2017 she made the European U20 1500m final and finished 11th. Good, but not great. She admits in those early years shewas sometimes “happy to be there” at major championships but that changed in 2019. “I was like, ‘am I just going to keep turning up and qualifying?’ I decided I was going to believe in myself. I was thinking about a medal.”Her progress had been steady over the years, though it wasn’t always a smooth ride. Power marked herself out as a big talent in her early teens by winning a slew of underage titles and it had longbeen her plan to go to college in the US. In sixth year she whittled it down to three options: Iona College in New York, Providence College in Rhode Island and the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. The first two had long traditions among Irish athletes, but Power admits she was “blinded by the bright lights” of Virginia, a much bigger college with incredible facilities.She was the first Irish athlete to go there – but her American dream was not as she’d imagined it. From the start she was homesick, but her chief worry was how the coachramped up her mileage, with hard eight-mile runsa daily staple, more than twice what she haddone back home. She watched as injuries rippled through the team anda few months later she turned her back on the place for good.Power had booked flights to Dublin months in advanceof the Christmas break but,closer the time, her coach demanded she change the dates to return to Virginia two days earlier, in time for a team meeting. That would cost an extra €700, so Power chose to fly back on the original date, which got hertemporarily suspended from the team andsaw her scholarship cut by five percent. She faced a frosty reception when she returned to Virginia and after a couple of weeks she decided she’d had enough, booking a one-way flight to Dublinin January 2017. She enrolled in DCU later that year and has since been under the guidance of Enda Fitzpatrick, who was ousted as long-time director of athletics last year. Her times are slowly creeping towards world-class territory. Last summerPower lowered her 800m PBto 2:02.39 and in Marchshe won the Irish indoor 800m title.She typically does three hard sessions a week: kilometre reps on a Tuesday, fartlek training on a Thursday, hill reps on a Saturday. The other days are filled with recovery runs and three times a week, she lifts weights under the guidance of Donie Fox at Sports Med Ireland. In recent months, that gym work has been confined to her back garden in Templeogue, while most of her sessions have been done in Tymon Park, where she often trains with her boyfriend, Dublin hurler James Madden. “He’s getting fitter,” she says, “and I’m getting a lot faster.”When the Olympics were postponed until 2021, Power wasn’t too upset. After all she’d been working full-time in an internship all yearand she’ll have much more flexibility for training as she heads into the final year ofher marketing degree at DCU. If she can take another second or two off her PB in the next 12 months, that Tokyo vision will become a reality. “It’s a goal now,” she says, “rather than the amazing bonus it would have been this year. It’s every athlete’s dream.”