Ö÷²¥´óÐã

Ö÷²¥´óÐã BLOGS - Eleanor Oldroyd
« Previous | Main | Next »

Sports stars ready for Strictly challenge

Eleanor Oldroyd Eleanor Oldroyd | 10:54 UK time, Wednesday, 16 September 2009

So, let's come up with some great sporting rivalries., Coe and Ovett, all go without saying. But what about Gough and Jackson? Or Dawson and Ramprakash?

We're talking Strictly Come Dancing, of course, and if like me you've been counting down to this Friday night since last year's Christmas Special, you don't need me to remind you of the moody magnificence of Argentine Tango, Matt Dawson resplendent in pink lycra for the Cha Cha Cha, Darren Gough turning twinkle toes in the Quickstep, and Colin Jackson's magnificent mid-air splits - although it was Gough, the Barnsley boy, who won the ballroom battle between the two in 2005.

Sports stars have a brilliant record of success in sequins - and with a record five current and past sporting champions in Strictly 2009, there must be a great chance of another one of them waltzing off with the coveted mirror ball trophy in three months' time.

But how come sports people do so well on Strictly? What gives them the edge?

I got on the phone to , who went on one of reality TV's famed "journeys" in the 2006 show - going, as Arlene Phillips put it, "from boring to brilliant in just six weeks!"

Matt has a few pretty impressive achievements on his CV - runner up in Strictly, champion of MasterChef - oh, and he has a Rugby World Cup winner's medal, too.

"Women ask me about cooking and dancing, men still talk to me about rugby", he told me. And according to him, there's not that much difference between being a celebrity ballroom dancer and a top class rugby player.

"You're training well during the week, performing at the weekends, rehearsing routines, knowing how to switch on and switch off mentally - sports people do that every day of their lives. They don't realise they have an automatic advantage over everyone else, but they do."

And when it comes down to it, it's all about being desperate to beat the other bloke - whether he's wearing a rugby shirt and a mouth guard - or sequins and fake tan. Or is it?

"I am competitive but only with myself", says Matt. "I couldn't give a monkey's about what other people do or how they perform. At the start, I just didn't want to embarrass myself, and then as I got better and better I just wanted to do the best dance that I could. Ramps was exactly the same as me."

Dawson had retired from rugby by the time he donned the pink lycra - and not just because of the abuse that would have come his way from the opposing props in the first scrum of the next match he played. But not all sports people use the show as a springboard to their post-retirement life.

Mark Ramprakash dances with Karen Hardy
Mark Ramprakash forms a successful partnership with Karen Hardy

Ramprakash has gone on to score a sack load of runs in the two summers since he won with pro partner Karen Hardy, and Matt reckons that his nemesis in the final of 2006 actually gave his cricket career a whole new lease of life.

One of the class of 2009, Jade Johnson, came on to 5 Live Sport a couple of weeks ago, and needless to say I was much more interested in behind the scenes dance gossip than in her hopes in the long jump in London 2012. She's adamant that she's definitely not retiring from athletics - just having a chilled out, relaxed, non-competitive year. (So what does a busy, full on, competitive year look like, then?)

And I wonder if British Athletics chief Charles Van Commenee winced when he heard this....

"I don't know how my feet are going recover, because they are in agony - it's so much harder being in high heels every day rather than in running spikes!"

Johnson is my tip to do well this year - the weight of expectation is on her shoulders, too, as she follows in the nimble footsteps of fellow athletes Colin Jackson and Denise Lewis. Her partner Ian Waite knows all about how to handle a star of track and field, having helped Lewis to second place in series two.

And we're due another sporting winner this time - Austin Healey's muscular jive was one of the highlights of 2008 but he didn't make it past the quarter finals, and in 2007 Kenny Logan's kilt won him a whole new tribe of admirers south of the border, but in the last couple of seasons Willie Thorne, Mark Foster, John Barnes and Andrew Castle haven't exactly had the judges reaching for the 10s.

So who's going to be the queen of the Quickstep - or the prince of the Paso Doble in 2009?

Joe Calzaghe, already the bookies' favourite, has thrown the opening punch even before the first bell, by.

But Matt Dawson's backing another star of reality TV to make it a cricketing hat-trick in 2009. It's the King of the Jungle himself....

"Tuffers is going to surprise a few people - he HAS got rhythm, and if he gets into it and gets the technical side of things right, he could be quite a dark horse."

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Joe Calzaghe is bound to have good feet from boxing. That's probably an advantage for dancing, right?

  • Comment number 2.

    Ermm... is this honestly an article about why sports people do well at Strictly Come Dancing?

    Surely this is unneccesary, since it's blindingly obvious why sports people do well at it?

    Except... erm... the blindingly obvious reason *isn't even mentioned in the bleedin article*.

    What makes successful sportspeople? Good physical co-ordination.
    What makes successful ballroom dancers? Good physical co-ordination.

    Blimey, it's hardly rocket science...

  • Comment number 3.

    This isn't really an appropriate blog on a sports page, should really be in the entertainment section.

  • Comment number 4.

    A good post eleanor.

    I tend not to pay much attention to Strictly though I am very curious to see how far Phil Tuffnel can get, he seem quite the opposite to Ramprakash and Dawson!

    My personal pick for a winner is Joe Calzaghe. He will be very good on his feet and hugely competitive

  • Comment number 5.

    You've forgotton about Martina Hingis. I know she is serious about this year's competition because I saw her running in Battersea Park in London last night!

  • Comment number 6.

    i agree thats sports people in general have an advantage in SCD. they're use to train regimes, constant pressure & peaking at the right time to perform.

    i'll wait & see if the class of 09 is a patch on the class of 08 [more potential winners & the awful sargent factor made it one of the best SCD ever] as for Dawson picking out Tuffers as a potential winner then obviously he hasn't watched him bat!!

    my tip is to keep an eye on jade johnson, the long jumper, [as long as she can sort out the blisters on her feet!] & chris hollins, bbc breaksfast sports presenter. yes i know he isn't a sportsman but he does play & take part in a variety of sports & is the son of john hollins [former player & manager of chelsea]

  • Comment number 7.

    I'm definitely with the person who says it's hardly rocket science - good co-ordination, physical fitness, higher pain threshold and dtermination and competitiveness. Simples!
    BTW, now that Joe and his missus have split up, what are the odds of him and the lovely Christina getting it on? If she's not still carrying a torch for John Sargeant, that is...

  • Comment number 8.

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.

  • Comment number 9.

    surely this is another thinly veiled attempt by the beeb to whip us all into a dancing frenzy for strictly.
    As a respected journo it must be pretty awful that you are given editorial dribble like dancing to cover and try to "vaguely" link it to sport.
    shame on you and your bosses for pushing this "light entertainment" onto the sport website.

  • Comment number 10.

    James Brown's on-stage moves were put down to his boxing training as a young man.

    Italian football clubs, notably AC Milan, use ballet training techniques to improve players balance and agility.

  • Comment number 11.

    I am looking forward to seeing Mr Calzaghe in lycra, and I don't mind what colour the lycra is!

  • Comment number 12.

    ''One of the class of 2009, Jade Johnson, came on to 5 Live Sport a couple of weeks ago, and needless to say I was much more interested in behind the scenes dance gossip than in her hopes in the long jump in London 2012.''

    In which case get a job in the Ö÷²¥´óÐã's entertainment department rather then presenting a sports show.

  • Comment number 13.

    Awful article and yet another plug for the celebrity dancing show.

  • Comment number 14.

    Yet again the beeb are serving up dross in the form of a ballroom dancing TV show...this is what they spend our license fee on?? Channel 5 now makes better shows than the Ö÷²¥´óÐã

  • Comment number 15.

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.

  • Comment number 16.

    As someone has brought up the relevance of this blog to a sports page perhaps I have a good excuse to raise up an old hobbyhorse of mine- the specific virtues of ballroom dancing for cricket..

    Fellow "Old" Test Match Special listeners will have heard the stories about Dennis Compton on tour. A real ladies man and socialiser, he would roll in to bed at 3-4 in the morning before a test match, catch a few hours sleep, and bat brilliantly. That is because there is a real connection between the footwork and 360 degree awareness needed to maintain balance and control, while steering a partner around a dance floor and what a batsman has to do at the crease..

    In boxing too, as was very evident with the dancing footwork of Mohamed Ali, the power that comes through the arms starts off with the purchase of the feet on the ground and the flow of energy that comes right up the legs and through the trunk of the body.

    Too few cricketers these days seem to have a true understanding of how to use the whole-body muscle system in this way. Far too often the bat is merely flung wildly at the ball using a huge muscular effort that focusses on the shoulders and arms and the weight of the bat. It is body abuse that is likely to cause injury and breakdown; and it reflects not only the poor state of Physical Education, but also our too sedentary life-style in which people rely too much upon "power-assistance" .

    This also means that the ability to work in pairs and teams is declining. Too many people engage in physical activity that is largely autonomous and does not have to accommodate other people. This applies to current dance crazes in which young people may have fine dance moves- as in breakdancing- but too many people want to dance like Michael Jackson. Great videos, but I do not recall a single 'pas de deux' merely group dancing as in the famous Thriller dance.

    Many batsmen may be able to look fine in front of the mirror or camera. Doing it when faced by the talents of a real life bowler is another thing.

    One TMS question was "Which England batsman had ballroom dancing medals? Answer- Mike Gatting, techically one of the best batsmen of his era; and like most of the batsmen in the teams that keep humiliating England he had good footwork. [How did the fates conspire to return the Ashes to England?]

    I for one had anticipated that both Gough and Ramprakash would do well. People tend to forget that Gough was something of an all rounder before he became a specialist strike fast-bowler. And Ramprakash had come through Gatting's Middlesex, and always had good footwork. In fact, as I think that Strictly brought out quite clearly, Ramprakash's problems when playing for England were not technical but emotional/psychological.

    It was obvious in Strictly that Ramprakash was an essentially quiet and private person. The series transformed him as he earned the affection and appreciation of the television audience. He always had the talent to play cricket and it should have suprised no-one that such success in such a field in which he was finally able to feel accepted in his inner self- and not just through the social facade that many people in our multi-cultural society learn to put on- has been followed by tremendous cricketing success. I am one of those who think that England selectors have been blinkered.

  • Comment number 17.

    Thanks everyone for your comments - Casseroleon,(#16) very informative! I suspect Dennis Compton would have done well in a show like SCD, not only for his dancing skills, but for his flamboyant and unconventional personality. You can't compare them as cricketers, obviously, but I wonder if Phil Tufnell might win some votes for the same reason?
    What about Joe Calzaghe, though? #'s 1 and 4, you may be right about his feet, but it's looking as if the rest of his body doesn't quite match up!
    And #'s 3, 9 and 12 - I take your point, but what is sport at its best but entertainment, anyway?

Ìý

Ö÷²¥´óÐã iD

Ö÷²¥´óÐã navigation

Ö÷²¥´óÐã © 2014 The Ö÷²¥´óÐã is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.