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It’s the ‘Celebrity Olympics’ Dozen fit

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NORMALLY it takes years, if not decades to train to be an Olympic athlete. However, the celebrity contestant­s on ITV’s The Games have just five weeks to prepare to compete across 10 track and field sports before going head-to-head on live TV to win the gold medal.

The 12 super-fit celebritie­s will battle it out over a week of live programmin­g from May 9, competing in events including diving, cycling, running and weightlift­ing, each trying to rack up enough points to get them to the top of the medals table and crowned Champion of The Games 2022.

“To do a show like this, you need to have real commitment and drive,” explains The Games presenter Holly Willoughby, 41.

“They’re a really fantastic bunch. There’s 12 of them, there are 10 events that they’re going to be competing in, so there’s a lot for them to do. But ultimately, one of them will be crowned the champion.”

Preparing to hit the athletics track, dive into the swimming pool and climb onto the bike saddle are ex-Love Islanders Wes Nelson and Olivia Attwood, Emmerdale actor Rebecca Sarker, former Coronation Street star Ryan Thomas, Harry Potter actor Josh Herdman, model and autism ambassador Christine McGuinness, The Wanted star

Max George, footballer and singersong­writer Chelcee Grimes, exStrictly pro Kevin Clifton, Corrie actor Colson Smith, ITV newsreader Lucrezia Millarini, and influencer, model and daughter of Spice Girl Mel B, Phoenix Brown.

Joining Willoughby as a live host is former internatio­nal cricketer Freddie Flintoff, while ex-England footballer and TV presenter Alex

Scott will be trackside reporter, getting all the action as it happens, and former footballer Chris Kamara will commentate.

They’ll be joined by YouTube star and sports fan Yung Filly, Olympic commentato­r Simon Brotherton, and a panel of sporting legends each night, with the week ending in a thrilling final that will crown one male winner and one female winner.

Musician and former Love Islander Nelson, 24, has elite sporting prowess in his blood. His brother, Curtis, is a profession­al footballer and he has two Olympian sprinter cousins though he says the only advice they’ve offered him is to “run fast, and don’t get injured”.

Also doing well, Flintoff reveals, is Coronation Street star Smith,

23, who only really got into sport when he took up running during lockdown. Emmerdale’s Sarker, 46, is also among the hosts’ favourites to win.

“The thing is, I am not sporty!” Sarker disputes. “I don’t feel sporty, I never was sporty at school. I’m active, but that’s not the same as sporty – sporty involves skill, I feel. And competitiv­eness. I don’t think I have either of those.

“But I’m learning – I’m 46, it’s never too late!”

Ex-Love Island star Attwood,

31, is facing a unique personal challenge in competing in The Games. As a teenager, she competed in long distance running at county

and national level before having to confront a “really sad end to sport”.

“I got really over-trained, and I was super underweigh­t,” she explains. “I ended up having an enlarged valve in my heart from too much training. It all ended really suddenly and horribly.”

It took her years to even get back in the gym, having adopted a negative attitude towards sport in general. “Sport was my life,” she said, “and this was like coming back to an environmen­t that I’d shut the door on. It was really emotional, the first day of being on the track, and it took a while to get back into running at pace like that.

“I’d never run like that in normal life, unless I was being chased by a murderer or if there was a sale on!”

Also facing a challenge in the competitio­n is actor Josh Herdman, who played Gregory Goyle in the Harry Potter films before launching a career in Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) – an inherently injury-prone sport.

“I broke my ankle in three places and dislocated it when I was 18, basically my whole foot separated from my leg,” Herdman said, describing a painful fighting-related injury. “I’ve got a metal plate in there, screws, pins, it’s like Robofoot!

“It’s caused little niggles – I’ve got limited flexibilit­y in that ankle – but the physio said there are actually a lot of pros who have metal work in their legs, and it’s doable. I’m doing alright.”

As a profession­al dancer, Kevin Clifton, 39, is no stranger to taxing cardio workouts, but The Games will be less about fancy footwork and more about brute strength and agility.

“People keep going, ‘Oh, you’re a dancer, you’ll be brilliant at all the events’, but I’m like, ‘I’m not sure how the paso doble translates to any of this!’”

Each of the contestant­s, regardless of their background, has had to put their all into the gruelling training weeks ahead of the live shows.

“It has been a real commitment to learn so many different discipline­s in a short amount of time, and to take on all of that informatio­n,” says The Games’ trackside reporter, exfootball­er Alex Scott. “But it’s going to be different for every single one of them.”

One thing’s for sure: They’re all bursting with competitiv­e spirit and raring to take on the challenge

The Games, Monday, STV, 9pm

 ?? ?? Freddie Flintoff, Holly Willoughby, Chris Kamara and Alex Scott
Freddie Flintoff, Holly Willoughby, Chris Kamara and Alex Scott
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