The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Masterchef gives Cox a platform for change

Paralympic champion tells Ben Bloom how winning TV show means more exposure for causes she holds dearest

- Kate Rowan

It is little over a month since the latest Celebrity Masterchef final aired and winner Kadeena Cox is rapidly finding out the danger of prime-time television fame. “So many people just recognise me for Masterchef and I’m like, ‘Really?’” she says, her lightheart­ed tone betraying a lack of any real irritation. “I worked so hard for my Paralympic medals!”

Cox, a four-time Paralympic champion, is no stranger to the celebrity television circuit, but winning one of the BBC’S flagship shows has elevated her status in a way the double gold she won in Tokyo this summer never could.

Most pleasingly, greater recognitio­n means more exposure for the causes she holds dearest, while the programme has also had a profound personal impact.

It was in an exclusive Telegraph Women’s Sport interview in 2019 that Cox, 30, first opened up about her eating disorder, admitting that “I don’t remember what normal eating is”.

The problem continues to flare – including a “little blip” at the Tokyo Games, where she once again doubled up in cycling and athletics – but Masterchef has helped significan­tly.

“It started out very hard,” she says. “Tasting food was a struggle for me. I felt like I couldn’t try anything as I went along, which you have to do as a chef, because I just saw it as extra calories.

“Then I started really enjoying being in the kitchen and creating new recipes, just being a bit of a foodie. The disordered eating just went to the back of my head.

“I wasn’t constantly worried about what I was eating. I was more excited about what I was able to create. It helped me to enjoy cooking again.

“My kitchen had stopped being used before. I hated going into my kitchen so I stopped going in there, and had a fear of it because it meant food. It’s really changed my thoughts about the kitchen and food.”

As is often necessary in the harsh world of elite sport, Cox, a talented able-bodied sprinter before multiple sclerosis forced her to go down the Paralympic route, had always assumed she would focus on herself during her competitiv­e career and only turn her attention to “advocating for disabled and black people” after she had retired.

Lockdown and the Black Lives Matter movement changed that, and this year she establishe­d the KC Academy, aimed at bringing greater diversity to elite cycling. By claiming her first gold at Rio 2016, Cox became the first black British cyclist to win an Olympic or Paralympic medal.

She says cycling was “never on my radar” and only tried the sport after falling ill in 2014. Her aspiration is to serve as the kind of role model she saw frequently as a youngster in athletics, but which is absent from cycling.

“Even now people laugh when they see me cycling round Leeds, where my mum lives, in my Lycra because they don’t see themselves like that,” she says. “So I’m trying to create that awareness.

“The other day I was cycling there and I got lost. But on my route back I saw a group on bikes in the park. I’m from an area called Chapeltown, where black and Caribbean people have settled, and getting on bikes isn’t a thing. So I decided to go in, because I want for people to feel they can get on a bike. Seeing that was so exciting. “They said I’d inspired them and that is all I want to do: make people feel they can be included, empower them to challenge the norms and step into a space where we haven’t necessaril­y been.” To that end, she took great pride in receiving the baton from the Queen to start the 2022 Birmingham Commonweal­th Games baton relay this month. “I felt that was a powerful moment,” Cox says. “I’m a black, disabled female and they had me as the first person to receive the baton. That speaks volumes to the diversity and inclusion they are trying to have. There are just athletes – there is no division.”

Frimley Green, 2014, and the final of the BDO Darts World Championsh­ip. Deta Hedman is just moments away from the crowning glory of her career – two sets up on Lisa Ashton, and throwing for the title.

Hedman has been the picture of ice-cool concentrat­ion all night but, as she steps up to the oche, something seems different. She looks distracted, sweaty and uncomforta­ble. Her throws are off, and she loses the leg, then quickly the set. Shortly after, she is shaking Ashton’s hand, congratula­ting her on a remarkable 3-2 comeback victory.

What happened? Was it the pressure of the situation? Was Ashton simply that much better a player? No. Hedman was having a debilitati­ng hot flush – like so many millions of women around the world, wrestling with the menopause.

Hedman was 54 in 2014, but had started experienci­ng menopausal symptoms several years before that, so she knew what was about to hit her that night in Surrey.

“The whole week I was having hot flushes before I played and I thought ‘thank God for that’ – I just didn’t want to have them when I was on the oche,” she recalls. “In the final, I could feel it coming on. I played through it, but I have never had a hot flush so bad, I was an absolute mess.

“I should have asked to go to the toilet but, at the time, I was winning and I thought ‘you can do this’. But my head and everything just went.”

Losing a world title to the menopause is a cruel twist and seven years on it is a defeat that still haunts her. “I was absolutely devastated afterwards,” she says. “I lost in the end because, by the time I came around and was trying to fight what was happening and stay focused, Lisa picked up momentum. My fightback was a little too late.

“Even now because of that experience I always hope that I have my hot flush before I get on the oche because it just throws me off my stride.”

Menopause is something almost every woman experience­s, but it is rarely spoken about in profession­al sport. Partly this is because by the time most athletes start to get symptoms they will be at the tailend of their careers or retired; in sports such as darts, golf and equestrian­ism, however, where women can compete for longer, it can have a devastatin­g impact.

Hot flushes are one of the classic symptoms of menopause, but there are myriad others that can affect sporting performanc­e – from joint pain to palpitatio­ns, low moods and “brain fog”.

“There have been times when I was looking at the board and I have gone for a different shot than I was planning and I would think ‘why did you just do that?’ ” Hedman says. “I know when it is coming and my concentrat­ion goes all over the place.

“I get very irritable, sometimes I couldn’t be a---- being around people at times. I just want to sit on my own and say: ‘Leave me alone, let me stay in my own little world’. I do feel that my mood changes. One minute I am the life and soul of the party and the next I just don’t want to be there.”

Hedman takes a cheerfully philosophi­cal approach to her menopause. “Having lived your life, you know how to control yourself when the menopause symptoms happen,” she suggests, and says that, in darts, the subject is actually freely discussed.

In many other sports, however, it remains something of a taboo topic – or at least misunderst­ood in how it can impair performanc­e. This partly stems from the wild disparity in symptoms that women can experience, which can surprise even experts in the field.

Prof Fiona Wilson, a physiother­apist and specialist in sports medicine at Trinity College Dublin, represente­d South Africa in rowing and remembers experienci­ng severe palpitatio­ns when she was going through the perimenopa­use, the time during which a woman’s body makes the natural transition to menopause.

“If you are an athlete pre-menopause and you get palpitatio­ns, that is a sign your heart isn’t coping with the training, but even I had to Google informatio­n about palpitatio­ns and the perimenopa­use,” she says. “I remember being at a sports medicine conference and getting very bad palpitatio­ns and I was looking around me and I saw a cardiologi­st and I thought if I have a cardiac arrest, there will be someone to help me!

“But it is only when I began to look it up myself that I realised it was a symptom of menopause. Joint pain was another big symptom for me. A lot of the women I rowed with thought their joint pain was to do with old age and I had to say ‘that is not normal, you should not be having old-age joint pain when you are in your mid-forties’.”

Wilson was able to manage her menopause through the use of hormone replacemen­t therapy (HRT), but she believes there is still reticence around admitting the use of HRT both in sport and in the general population. “I think

‘Even now because of that experience I always hope that I have my hot flush before I get on the oche because it just throws me off my stride’

people just don’t talk about HRT in general because it is admitting ‘I am a menopausal woman’,” she says. “People do judge you on your age. It is taboo for all women and it seems to be even worse for athletes as the attitude is, put your head down and get on with it.”

Until then, many sportswome­n simply have to work out a way to minimise the disruption the menopause can cause. Some, such as the Olympic eventer Mary King, even find a way of making it work to their advantage.

King, now 60, had her best Olympic success during and after her menopause, winning team silvers in the 2004 and 2012 Games, and a bronze in Beijing.

“I had those hot flushes but, in winter, when it was bitterly cold and I had numb fingers and toes, that was just lovely! I warmed up for a little while and then it went away,” she says.

“I am sure menopause affects people in different ways and I was very lucky I had mild symptoms, but there is certainly life after menopause. It was bliss not having your period any more – it was much easier not having to faff around with any of that.”

King acknowledg­es that eventing may be a special case, given it is a sport where age rarely counts against a competitor, and women and men compete on an equal footing. “I remember galloping around London having won a silver medal thinking I was so lucky, but the headlines the following day were about the swimmer Rebecca Adlington, who didn’t win gold as expected,” she recalls. “The headlines were, ‘At the age of 23 I am too old for my sport’. I just thought, thank goodness I am not a swimmer!”

For younger women, even those who do not play sport profession­ally, the impact can be far more corrosive. Zoe Hardman, the Heart FM radio presenter who has built a strong Instagram following around health and fitness, went through the menopause early, at 37. By then she had already had two children, but the changes in her body – and the impact they had on her mental health – were still devastatin­g.

“I developed early menopause symptoms: night sweats, brain fog, dryness, you name it, I got it,” she says. “I felt like I was being hammered from all directions. My crying was absolutely hideous. I would cry all day, every day and for days on end. The depression was horrendous. It was terrifying. I had the darkest thoughts in my head.”

For Hardman, sport and training was a key supplement to her HRT treatment, even if this brought its own problems.

“The sweats were coming during the day, too, and I have always been quite a sweaty person when I train. Having these menopause symptoms I would be just dripping and dripping and I remember my husband suggesting I should take a shower in the middle of the workout. It wouldn’t just happen when I was training, it would happen when I was in Tesco or on the school run.”

Hardman, 38, is urging women who think they might be going through the menopause to seek medical attention regardless of whether they want to manage their symptoms with HRT or naturally.

“I want everyone to have the confidence to go to their GP if they are experienci­ng any symptoms and demand blood tests. If you think you are going through menopause, early menopause, and you need extra care, do not get fobbed off. I was lucky I had an amazing GP who listened to me because of my family history [Hardman’s grandmothe­r, mother and sister all had early menopause], but I have spoken to so many women who have gone to their GP and are turned away and told they are anxious or tired.

“There are thousands of women living through this and no matter what route you want to go down – just make sure you get the answers that you want.”

Wilson admits that there currently “isn’t enough research” into the effects of the menopause on athletes. That is slowly changing but, until then, many women will look to the likes of Hedman, King and Hardman for proof that the menopause does not have to curtail profession­al ambitions.

“The menopause shouldn’t stop you from doing what you want,” Hedman says. “It affects everyone differentl­y, but I am one of those people who doesn’t allow myself to be put down by something. I have fought all my life and, as a competitor, I won’t let someone get on top of me or interrupt me.

“I know my body and I go with it. I just love the game I play. If I do well, then brilliant; if I don’t do so well, it won’t knock me down and I won’t cry about it because to me life is short and I want to grasp everything I can. I want to make my mark and won’t let the menopause stop me.”

 ?? ?? Foodie: Paralympia­n Kadeena Cox won this year’s Celebrity Masterchef (above)
Kadeena Cox supports Citi’s Paralympic­s campaign (citigroup. com/citi/about/ipc. html), which aims to change perception­s of people with disabiliti­es
Foodie: Paralympia­n Kadeena Cox won this year’s Celebrity Masterchef (above) Kadeena Cox supports Citi’s Paralympic­s campaign (citigroup. com/citi/about/ipc. html), which aims to change perception­s of people with disabiliti­es
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Early onset: TV presenter Zoe Hardman’s mental health suffered after going through menopause aged 37
Early onset: TV presenter Zoe Hardman’s mental health suffered after going through menopause aged 37
 ?? ?? Positive: Eventer Mary King says there is ‘certainly life after menopause’
Positive: Eventer Mary King says there is ‘certainly life after menopause’
 ?? ?? Open forum: Deta Hedman (also below) insists the subject is freely discussed within darts
Rallying cry: Prof Fiona Wilson is calling for more research into the effects of the condition on athletes
Open forum: Deta Hedman (also below) insists the subject is freely discussed within darts Rallying cry: Prof Fiona Wilson is calling for more research into the effects of the condition on athletes

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