Glamorgan Gazette

It makes me sadder if I don’t exercise, it absolutely does

Swimming legend Sharron Davies talks to LAUREN TAYLOR about remaining fit in her 60s and living with arthritis

- For further informatio­n on Arthrosami­d visit arthrosami­d.com

OLYMPIC silver medallist swimmer Sharron Davies may be 61, with nine knee surgeries under her belt, but she says she can still “drop down and do 40 press ups”.

Sharron, who was selected for the Montreal Olympic Games at the age of just 11, retired in 1994 after breaking more than 200 British records in the pool, but fitness has continued to be a huge part of her life – especially as she gets older.

“I’ve got a 25-year-old daughter, who is an exinternat­ional track and field athlete, and I can still beat her on core exercise. I can still beat my 17-year-old son, who plays really good rugby, on core stability and core exercise,” she says.

Sharron, who famously held the Commonweal­th Games record for the 400-metre individual medley event for 18 years, goes to the gym four times a week, cycles and walks now but, “I’m not an obsessed exerciser”, she says, “I used to do six hours a day, I now don’t do six hours a week.”

With her history in competitiv­e sport (she won a silver at the 1980 Olympics in Moscow and was Commonweal­th champion twice), a stint on the original series of Gladiators as Amazon, and now as patron of Disabled Sport England and SportsAid, exercising is simply part of who Sharron is.

“It’s always been a part of my life. It’s almost automatic.”

But keeping active is especially important given the problems she’s had for a long time with her right knee. She first damaged it aged 12, getting her foot stuck in a pothole and tore her ACL (anterior cruciate ligament). Thankfully, being a swimmer (a nonweight bearing sport) it didn’t affect her ability to train or compete. “Then in 1995 I was doing Gladiators and a very lovely police woman, terribly apologetic, fell on my knee sideways and whatever was left of my ACL went.”

Sharron had an ACL reconstruc­tion that year and nine further operations since then. “I have no cartilage left in that knee, whatsoever, it’s it just bone on bone,” says sa Sharon, who was also al diagnosed with grade gr four osteoarthr­itis ti in her knee about a decade d ago.

“The last [operation] was seven years ago, when a piece of cartilage la that was left flew off and went into the h joint, I couldn’t straighten st my legs. “That was unbelievab­ly painful. I used to sit at nighttime just rubbing my knee watching the telly. It almost got to the point where I was doing it subconscio­usly all the time because it would get swollen and achy, and I would just live with [the pain]”. In September 2022, she had a treatment called Arthrosami­d –pain relief via a single injection for knee osteoarthr­itis.

While it doesn’t cure the condition, patients can expect to see improved mobility and pain relief within a few weeks. “You literally go in, it’s done in the lunchtime, you don’t need any downtime,” says Sharron, who is an ambassador for the jab. “About a week or 10 days afterwards, I’m thinking, ‘I’m not rubbing my leg’. It has given me unbelievab­le pain relief.” And she hasn’t needed a top up yet. “All of a sudden, you realise that you’re being more mobile... I had to reel myself in, because all of a sudden, I was pain free and I’m doing three times as much.”

Eventually, she says, she’ll need a full knee replacemen­t. “My knee is not very attractive,” she laughs, my right looks nothing like my left knee, it’s twice the size almost.

“If I were to go and see [a doctor] now they would look at my pictures and ask, how are you walking? They don’t go, how are you cycling? How are you going to the gym?”.

Sharron puts it down to maintainin­g the muscles around the joint.

It’s not the only part of her body she has undergone operations on; over the years she’s had broken ribs, two broken arms, a hernia op, a bladder op, multiple back and shoulder operations (pro swimmers often end up with lower back issues and over-rotated shoulders).

“I’ve had seven or eight broken bones. I broke my leg not that long ago, I got knocked off my bike and broke my femur really badly.

“I can rebuild me... we just keep going!” she says, with a laugh.

But her body’s resilience is due to all the work she does in the gym. “When I broke my leg I was back on my exercise bike within six days.”

She doesn’t swim now, though. “Because for me, it’s a busman’s holiday. I did 20 years of my life, six hours a day – it’s quite enough for anybody really.” Plus, “when you have been a swimmer, the shoulders aren’t great, so I don’t like to aggravate them too much.”

She admits keeping fit “is not as easy at 60 as it was at 40. It wasn’t as easy at 40 as it was at 20. Unfortunat­ely, it’s a linear line that’s going in the wrong direction”.

But Sharron insists there is a lot that we can do to look after ourselves as we get older.

“The number of times people say to me, ‘My metabolism slowed down’. It’s not that your metabolism that slowed down, you’ve lost muscle mass, it’s muscle mass that burns calories – if you don’t have muscles, you won’t burn calories.”

Also, “It definitely makes me sadder if I don’t exercise, it absolutely does.” She’s on HRT for menopause symptoms, a multivitam­in, vitamin D and cod liver oil, but when it comes to her wellbeing, Sharron believes that a positive mental attitude is key.

“I’m a big believer that your cup is half full”, she says, and positivity comes naturally to her. “Why would it not? I’m a Olympian.”

I was doing Gladiators (left) and a very lovely police woman, terribly apologetic, fell on my knee sideways...whatever was left of my ACL went.

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DECISION:
Sharron Davies decided to have Arthrosami­d treatment on her knee pictured below
JOINT DECISION: Sharron Davies decided to have Arthrosami­d treatment on her knee pictured below
 ?? ?? MEDAL IN MOSCOW: Sharron celebrates at the 1980 OIympics ab
MEDAL IN MOSCOW: Sharron celebrates at the 1980 OIympics ab

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