Connacht Tribune
Taking it all in her stride

Lifestyle – Carrabane athlete Olive Loughnane represented Ireland at four Olympic Games and six consecutive World Championships. Olive, who holds the gold and the silver medal in the 2009 World Championship 20km racewalk, tells FRANCIS K BEIRNE why it is that she has two medals from the same event and about her accidental career in racewalking.
Being presented with a medal following a World Championships final is a rare and special moment for an athlete. Most of the Irish winners are familiar names – John Treacy, Eamonn Coghlan, Sonia O’Sullivan – but there’s one Irish athlete who has two World Championship medals, gold and a silver, and what makes this even more special is that they were awarded for the same race!
Olive Loughnane from Carrabane, between Athenry and Loughrea and a member of Loughrea Athletics Club, was ecstatic when she finished runner-up to Russian walker Olga Kaniskina at the World Championships in Berlin in August 2009. Climbing on to the podium to receive her silver medal is a memory that will stay with her forever. But, a few years later, the results changed and Olive was elevated to gold.
In 2015, Olga Kaniskina was disqualified for three years and two months, starting from October 15, 2012, because of illegal doping. In addition, all her results between July and September 2009 were annulled.
Kaniskina was part of a racewalking group trained by the notorious coach Viktor Chegin – more than a dozen members of the group were suspended for doping violations, while he was banned from all sports-related activities in 2016.
The upshot was that, in July 2016, Olive was retrospectively awarded the gold medal for the 2009 20km racewalk in Berlin.
On that August day, she had produced a season’s best time of 1:28:58 to chase home Kaniskina and also to see off the challenge of Chinese walker Liu Hong in the battle for silver.
It was a very special moment for the then-retired 40-year-old in 2016 as she was presented with the gold medal by IAAF president Sebastian Coe at that year’s European Championships in Amsterdam, before the Irish national anthem was played and the tricolour raised.
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
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Connacht Tribune
Opposition waits to see effect of fall-out to end of eviction ban

World of Politics with Harry McGee
An Opposition party is a bit like an invading army trying to surmount the defences of a seemingly impregnable fortress – constantly surveying the moat, the drawbridge, the doors and the battlements to spot any weakness.
For a Government party, the chink usually reveals itself when it tries to push through a deeply unpopular policy – like, for example, the decision to bring the eviction ban to a close at the end of March.
The Government’s thinking was that, by delaying the end of it, it was storing up problems for itself. The longer it left the measure in place, the bigger the queue of landlords who wished to sell up when the restrictions were lifted, triggering a huge number of evictions.
As it was, even ending the restriction now, according to campaigners such as Peter McVerry, was going to cause a “tsunami” of evictions.
Senior Coalition figures admitted that it was going to have an impact on homelessness in the short term.
As soon as the Government announced it was lifting the ban, there was a hue and cry from the Opposition.
Several back benchers in Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael expressed concern but were brought around by assurances from senior Ministers that local authorities and approved housing bodies would be given the go-ahead to buy properties from landlords who were selling up and leaving tenants in situ.
However, if there are any upsides to the move, they will not become apparent for months at the very least, by which time there could be a big spike in the homelessness figures.
From the moment the decision was made, the Green Party TD for Dublin Central Neasa Hourigan signalled she opposed the move.
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
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Connacht Tribune
Marine Park looks dead in the water

Plans to develop a marine park in Conamara were dealt a major blow this week after An Bórd Pleanála refused to grant planning permission for the development.
Galway County Council had already rejected proposals by Údarás na Gaeltachta to develop Páirc na Mara on lands east of Cill Chiaráin village.
The regional authority responsible for economic, social and cultural development of the Gaeltacht, appealed the decision to the planning appeals board but it too has refused to grant permission.
This latest decision blows a big hole in Údarás na Gaeltachta’s job creation plans for Conamara – its five-year employment strategy launched last year hinged on jobs growth from Páirc na Mara.
Reacting, in a statement to the Connacht Tribune, Údarás na Gaeltachta said it was awaiting ABP’s Inspector’s Report.
“This will help to inform how we proceed in the coming weeks. We remain committed to the Páirc na Mara project and to sustainable development and job creation in the Iorras Aithneach Gaeltacht area,” it added.
In a letter from ABP member, Chris McGarry, the Board gave two reasons for refusing the plan.
They related to the lack of information about the potential impacts of climate change; and the potential impact on water levels and the water supply in nearby water sources.
The proposal involved phase one of the continued development of a marine innovation park on a brownfield site of nine hectares, to include a number of marine-based industrial facilities and educational and applied research sites at Cill Chiaráin.
Get the full story in this week’s Connacht Tribune, on sale in shops now, or you can download the digital edition from www.connachttribune.ie. You can also download our Connacht Tribune App from Apple’s App Store or get the Android Version from Google Play.
Connacht Tribune
Galway wrap up campaign with big victory in Mullingar

Galway 4-27
Westmeath 1-12
Ivan Smyth at Cusack Park
GALWAY hurlers fired in 2-8 without reply in the final 15 minutes of this National League tie as they secured a flattering 24-point victory over a gutsy but outclassed Westmeath outfit.
On Sunday, Conor Cooney looked sharp as he fired over five points from play for the second game running. Daithí Burke was solid once more at centre back and even though Westmeath moved Davy Glennon on him in the second half with the aim of dragging the Turloughmore man away from goal, Burke went about his business in a typically quiet and efficient manner.
With brothers Davy and Ronan Glennon facing off on opposite sides, this was a unique occasion for the pair. Davy did fire over a point but was starved of quality ball. From a Galway perspective, Padraic Mannion and TJ Brennan were the next best in defence as the pair both grabbed a point apiece. Evan Niland was reliable from the dead ball and when he moved out from the full forward line, he was more effective in linking the play.
Galway clearly possessed the superior stickmen and never trailed but after a promising start they faded out of the game, going 11 minutes without a score. They finished the first-half strong to see their lead increase from three points after 27 minutes to nine at the break. The third quarter was sloppy from a Galway perspective as they were outscored by six points to four in the first 20 minutes of the final period before the reinforcements arrived against a tiring Westmeath.
Galway then rattled in 3-9 and conceded just a solitary point thereafter with Declan McLoughlin and Jason Flynn grabbing goals before wing back Tiernan Killeen added another late on. After a poor start in Ennis seven days prior, Galway raced out of the blocks notching five points in as many minutes.
Cianan Fahy opened the scoring after eight seconds while Brian Concannon, Liam Collins, Niland (’65) and Conor Cooney gave Galway the ideal start. Cooney could have had a goal before arrowing over but Tommy Doyle produced a brave block, one which saw him retire injured moments later.
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
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