Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

Boxing's first female Olympic gold medalist: 'I thought I couldn't continue'

By Nicola Adams, Special to CNN
updated 8:39 AM EDT, Fri September 28, 2012
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • British boxer Nicola Adams is the first ever Olmypic gold medalist in women's boxing
  • She fell in love with the sport as a child after watching her dad's video collection of boxing greats
  • However, her career nearly came to an end after a serious back injury outside the ring
  • She explains how she recovered just in time to make the selection for the British Olympic team this year

Editor's note: Nicola Adams, 29, is the first ever Olympic gold medalist in women's boxing. In front of a home crowd at the London 2012 Olympics, she fought her way past a year-long injury to knock down Chinese boxer Ren Cancan in the final. Here she reveals how she fell in love with the sport and her heartache when she almost couldn't carry on.

Sheffield, England (CNN) -- Everyone thinks I'm a woman in a man's world, but to me I'm just a boxer doing the sport I love.

It's been with me since I was a child. My dad had videos of all the great fighters -- Sugar Ray Leonard, Muhammad Ali. I watched them winning their Olympic medals and world titles and saw those big crowds and thought to myself, "that looks exciting."

Then one night when I was 12 years old, my mum couldn't get a babysitter for me and my brother, so she took us down to the gym with her. They had an after-school boxing class, so I joined in and absolutely loved it.

Everybody I met down there became like a little family to me. They'd take me to boxing exhibitions and shows, introduce me to new people and we'd all just stick together.

This was so important for my development because it meant I always wanted to be there, I always felt supported and knew that there were people who believed in me.

How Nicola Adams punched her way to gold

You have to remember that being a great boxer is only 50% physical; the rest is mental. You have to be really confident, calm, relaxed and focused. You've got to get in there thinking "I can win. I can achieve this."

More from Human to Hero: Prima ballerina Svetlana Zakharova

My first competitive bout was really fun. I remember peering behind the curtain, peeping out and seeing all my friends and family in the crowd waiting for it to begin.

There weren't many female boxers around at that time, it was very rare, so I just wanted to get in there and perform and show off my skills. That's when I remember thinking, "yeah, I love this sport!"

But it wasn't easy to get to where I am now. All the training from such a young age has been tough. A standard day involves a run in the morning, followed by strength and conditioning exercises -- where I do weights, press ups, pull ups -- and then a boxing session which includes bags, pads, and sparring.

Life can get in your way no matter how dedicated you are, no matter how hard you train
Nicola Adams, boxer

There are times you have to run through the rain and it's cold and it's minus whatever degrees outside, but you just have to get up and you go and do the work.

And on top of that everything you eat is monitored. You can't just go out and have a McDonald's or a pizza when you want, you have to be so strict on yourself.

There's no way of finding the motivation for doing it unless you absolutely love the sport. You've got to really love it like nothing else otherwise you won't get through the training.

That's why I don't see it as a sacrifice. I see it as things I want to do, I choose to do. I choose to not go out clubbing and drinking with my friends because I want to be a great boxer.

But life can get in your way no matter how dedicated you are, no matter how hard you train.

Having hardly sustained any injuries in the ring -- just one broken thumb -- I seriously put my back out in 2009 when I tripped over a bandage hanging out of my bag.

I got up and didn't feel in too much pain. In fact, I even went to a tournament and it wasn't until a few weeks later that the pain got worse and worse.

They took me to the doctors and found a crack in one of my vertebrae -- I was out of boxing for a year. I had to have complete bed rest for three to four months.

It was so difficult because I'm a get-up-and-go person. I like to run around, see what's going on. To be laid in bed, brace put on to keep my spine in line, it was really hard to pick myself up again.

More from Human to Hero: Molecular gastronomy chef Heston Blumenthal

The 10 seconds before I was told that I'd won, I already knew it
Nicola Adams, boxer

There were moments when I thought I couldn't continue, but my friends and family helped me through the hard times, and I just managed to make it back in time for the last assessment camp and make the team. It was almost like it was meant to be.

Then came the Olympic final against Cancan. I just remember thinking, whatever she does I'm going to do 10 times better; she throws a punch I'll throw five back. She bought out the very best in me in that match.

The 10 seconds before I was told that I'd won, I already knew it. I could feel it, I was just thinking I can't believe that I've done this; I can't believe I'm going to be Olympic champion in front of my home audience.

Winning the medal meant everything; all the hard work, all the ups and downs, highs and lows, everything in my life has revolved around boxing. So for me, winning the gold medal was everything I dreamed about as a kid.

By putting women's boxing in the Olympics, they showed that women can and should be allowed to do any sport they choose. It's all about equality, it's time for a change.

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
updated 11:53 PM EDT, Wed June 19, 2013
She's a perfect 10; the surfer that other professionals will drag themselves out of the water to watch.
updated 6:56 AM EDT, Wed June 19, 2013
Silvana Lima
Surfer Silvana Lima is the only Brazilian woman competing on the elite World Tour.
updated 7:33 AM EDT, Thu June 13, 2013
Even at the age of 40, Haile Gebrselassie -- the "smiling assassin" of running -- has no intention of resting on his laurels.
updated 1:48 PM EDT, Wed June 5, 2013
Ruta Meilutyte's initial brush with swimming as a seven-year-old in Lithuania could never have foretold her success in the pool.
updated 8:27 AM EDT, Wed May 29, 2013
Amid all the noise and chaos of a short-track speed skating final, there is one voice in the crowd Charles Hamelin can hear as clear as a bell.
updated 9:01 AM EDT, Wed May 22, 2013
Zoe Smith's petite frame should fool nobody -- she's a weightlifting warrior. If the teen isn't employing her strength, she's smiting Twitter trolls.
updated 8:48 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2013
Figure skating is a sport where performance is everything -- from the flamboyant routines to the glitzy outfits to the interaction with the crowd.
updated 7:52 AM EDT, Thu May 9, 2013
At an age when most pensioners are winding down their lives, Fauja Singh began a new one. Now 102, he has become an unlikely celebrity.
updated 9:14 AM EDT, Wed May 1, 2013
As a shivering and nervous new recruit to the British Army, Semesa Rokoduguni began to seriously question why he had left the tropical island of Fiji.
updated 9:58 AM EDT, Wed April 24, 2013
Ben Ainslie, the most successful sailor in Olympic history, is now trying to help Britain win the America's Cup for the first time.
updated 10:41 AM EDT, Wed April 17, 2013
As driving snow enveloped him and the temperature sank towards zero, Songezo Jim took another big step towards realizing his cycling dream.
updated 10:27 AM EDT, Thu April 18, 2013
Having battled to make her name in the male-dominated world of surfing, Stephanie Gilmore is leading a crusade to change the sport's image.
updated 7:49 AM EDT, Wed April 10, 2013
Mohammad Nabi hopes the only sport approved by the Taliban will play a big part in uniting his country Afghanistan.
updated 9:23 AM EDT, Wed March 27, 2013
She beat bone cancer to become one of Hong Kong's top Paralympians, and Alison Yu Chui Yee is living testament to the power of positivity.
updated
Olympic champion Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro
Charlotte Dujardin has completed an incredible journey from low-paid stable girl to becoming the new star of dressage.
updated 10:14 AM EDT, Wed March 13, 2013
Jorge Lorenzo
With a straight face and a shrug, world motorcycling champion Jorge Lorenzo details the danger involved in reaching the top.
updated 7:21 AM EST, Wed March 6, 2013
Inspirational music has long served to focus the mind of some of the world's greatest sporting stars.
updated 10:26 AM EST, Thu February 28, 2013
What do you do if you're a "crazy kid" growing up in Utah? You clip on your skis and go downhill fast -- very fast -- that's what.
updated 8:38 AM EST, Wed February 20, 2013
Born into grinding poverty and with a degenerative eye condition, Terezinha Guilhermina has overcome the odds to be a champion runner.
updated 11:04 AM EST, Wed February 13, 2013
Great Britain can legitimately claim to have invented ice hockey, but its modern-day heroes are struggling to uphold that heritage.
updated 8:45 AM EST, Wed February 6, 2013
It was a "crazy" high-stakes routine that risked everything in the pursuit of gold. It was Olympic glory or humiliation for Epke Zonderland.
updated 7:54 AM EST, Wed January 30, 2013
He is self coached, he relies on YouTube videos to hone his technique -- and in running-mad Kenya, he had to plead with officials to win selection.
updated 2:02 PM EST, Tue January 29, 2013
Nicol David
Standing tall in a sport once dubbed "boxing with rackets," Nicol David has a better analogy to define the particular rigors of squash.
ADVERTISEMENT