“Behind every great man….”
But Great Women don’t stand behind their men. They stand, or row, next
to them…. Day and Night talks to Dr. Lady Ann Redgrave, part mother, part
doctor, part Osteopath, part Tawny Owl.
Dr. Redgrave has competed in
the Olympics as a highly successful rower, representing Great Britain
in the Women’s Eight at Los Angeles in 1984, and winning Bronze and Silver
medals in the Commonwealth Games in 1986, despite only having taken up
the sport in 1981. And all while training for an exemplary career in medicine….boy,
am I nervous….
As is often the case with illustrious
careers, Dr. Redgrave stumbled on the water quite by accident. “It was
in 1981”, she explains. “I was at Charing Cross Hospital Medical School
training to be a doctor. I was sitting in the common room one Wednesday
afternoon when a fellow student came in and asked me if I’d make up a
rowing eight, as one team member hadn’t turned up. I was literally dragged
into it! My PE history at school had been a bit stop-start, but I did
represent my county at netball. While studying for my O levels, I contracted
viral meningitis. I was quite active until then, but doctors told me I
should lead a quieter life….so when I got to University I wasn’t considered
as someone who was particularly sporty. Of that Wednesday afternoon eight,
four of us turned out to be quite successful rowers (“quite successful”
is presumably AnnRedgraveSpeak for Olympic Silver). “We had a season when
we won everything. I sometimes wonder what my life would have been like
if that afternoon hadn’t happened. Three years before the Los Angeles
Olympics, I’d never been near a boat.”
Although Dr Redgrave has a
completely rounded life of her own, I can’t not mention her husband. “I
met Steve in 1984, my first year on the National Team. Our boats trained
against each other. Men’s fours train against women’s eights, for parity
of speed. I competed in the LA Olympics in that year, my final year at
medical school. Within two years we were going out….I was training constantly
and at the same time studying for my finals, but I was so driven to keep
my training going. As a junior house doctor, rowing gave me an excuse
to leave the ward to train. When I look back, I must have been mad! I
must have been tired, but I don’t remember. I just enjoyed it all. I had
no life outside of rowing and study. It was fortunate that Steve was a
rower, or we would never have met!”
Dr Redgrave was Chief Medical
Officer to the British Olympic Rowing team until she stepped down in 2001.
”I was originally training as an orthopaedic surgeon but switched to Osteopathy/Orthopaedic
Medicine in 1988. I always knew I wanted to be work in sport but sports
medicine is still not recognised as a specialism in this country. I have
always loved orthopaedic medicine; it’s so rewarding. You are dealing
with people who are already relatively healthy, and you assist them in
getting better. I qualified as a doctor in 1985 and as an osteopath in
1990.” She now runs a practice in Bourne End, Buckinghamshire. “We have
recently expanded to deal with osteopathy, physiotherapy, sports massage
therapy, and sports medicine - I practise a real mish-mash now, probably
best described as musculoskeletal medicine.”
Now Steve has retired from
competitive rowing, is he around more? “Well, I actually see less of him!
When Steve was rowing, it was accepted that it was seven days a week.
I assumed that when he gave up we would have more of a normal life, but
that hasn’t happened. When he competed in the Olympics, and I was team
doctor, we took the children with us, so we actually spent more time together
as a family. I guess this will change with time and it’s still something
we aim for. We had friends invite us for lunch in February, and the first
available date we could offer was late April. We’re trying really hard
now to focus on having a normal family life!”
Dr Redgrave seems to possess
this natural determination to win. The difference between Olympiads and
ordinary folk seems to be the dogged determination to carry on when the
physical body is telling one to stop…so would she be running the London
Marathon again this year having done so in 2001 and 2003?
“NO! Well, I’m not sure. Maybe
a half marathon. To complete a marathon is a great achievement, but I
really don’t understand why people keep going back year after year. I
find it hard to train properly for a full marathon. My feet fall apart…”
WHAT?? “Before my first marathon, in 2001, I had never completed the whole
26 miles. At about 20 miles I was seeing stars and my feet really suffered.
I shed virtually all the soles of my feet in the days following the race.
In 2003, I had trained much more, but I still lost all of my toenails.”
Reader, I have to retire to faint at this point.
That’s better. It’s still comparatively
rare for the British to win Olympic medals. Nature or nurture? “I feel
very strongly about the way sport is taught in our schools. A lot of schools
have this non-competitive policy. Life is competitive with a considerable
amount of stress, and managing this can be taught through schools. School
is the platform to learn competitiveness, team work, determination, and
at a basic level, how to sit correctly while studying. So in answer to
your question probably a mixture but we could do more to nurture.”
The Redgraves have recently
formed Redgrave Health and Leisure. “People need a personal, physical
check up before starting any form of exercise. They discover they are
unfit, then go to a gym to solve the problem, and if correct health checks
aren’t carried out, the problem can be exacerbated or a new one created.
Gym instructors are traditionally poorly paid and staff turnover is high.
We have spent two years developing an idea and raising funds to build
a centre to teach correct methods. As yet funds have not been forthcoming
but I can but hope.”
Alf Tupper, the “Tough of the
Track” hero from my childhood “Victor” comic, trained on fish and chips.
Does Dr. Redgrave follow a specific diet? “Not really. I just eat healthily.
I’m not really a cake person. I do take vitamin and mineral supplements
occasionally. I don’t have a daily keep fit regime - my life is manic
anyway. I do enjoy running around this area (home is in a beautiful deciduous
woodland in Buckinghamshire) and I try to run once or twice a week when
I can. I’d advise anyone who doesn’t feel that they can commit time to
regular workouts to simply walk… it’s good, valuable and effective exercise.”
Dr Redgrave is President of
Horizons Sports Club, a club for mentally and physically disabled children
in which a child aged 5-11 years is supervised in sporting activities
by sixth form volunteers from local schools. In turn, there is a coach
trained in each discipline to supervise each session. “It’s fantastic,
and it brings out hidden character qualities in both the children and
the volunteers. I spend as much time there as I can.
And, er, I’m Tawny Owl at the
local Brownies…..”
Hiding my past as a Brownie
reject, I asked Dr. Redgrave what she considers to be her biggest achievement
– their three children not allowed! “Doctor to the Olympic Rowing Team
certainly. But I took up piano for fun a few years back, and incredibly
I’ve achieved grade four. I accept I’ll never be the best, but then I
never imagined when I took up rowing that I would be going to the Games
three years later…... women should always have something for themselves;
just doing something for the fun of it. My piano playing is important
as a de-stressing exercise. Having said that, I still get nervous when
performing!”
So what IS her core driving
force? She laughs. “I do understate. I have short term goals. I’m always
looking to do that bit more, and I try to do everything to the best of
my abilities. When my duet partner’s piano teacher told us the piece we
had chosen to perform was too difficult, we became all the more determined
to do it. I was told I’d never make a doctor! Women can be easily quashed,
they need more self belief.” Does this Everywoman realise how inspirational
she is? After some deliberation, “If someone from the outside looking
at me said “I like the way you run your life”……I’d find some satisfaction
in that.”
I offer to play Fairy Godmother.
“I’d like a 48 hour day. I don’t watch television and that certainly helps.
Our children are still school age, and I do have a busy life, but I suppose
everyone else does too! I have travelled a lot, but always for a purpose.
I’d like to walk the Great Wall of China, see a little more of world culture.
I’d like to travel for fun.”
Dr Redgrave received an honorary
Doctor of Science (Hon DSc), degree from Loughborough University in 2001,
for technical service as the team doctor for the British rowing team,
Sydney 2000. How does she feel? “I’m receiving another one soon, from
Stoke on Trent, again for services to sports medicine. I’m very proud.”
Add warm, funny and absurdly
modest to that. |