The Countryfile and The One Show presenter is also known for his work as a commentator on the BBC’s gymnastics coverage
BBC presenter Matt Baker has opened up on the “heartbreaking” decision he had to make as he was forced to abandon his childhood dream following a health diagnosis.
The 48-year-old is best known to TV audiences for his work on Countryfile and The One Show, as well as children’s show Blue Peter and a stint on Strictly Come Dancing in 2010. But as a child, he harboured ambitions of representing his country on the global stage as a professional sportsman.
In his youth, Baker was a keen and successful gymnast, competing in junior events and winning a North of England title as he dreamt of making it to the Olympics.
While he would later work as a commentator on the BBC’s coverage of the Games, however, that’s as close as he would get as a medical diagnosis at the age of 13 brought his own sporting ambitions to an end.
Unsurprisingly, Baker was left devastated as he was forced to abandon gymnastics, as he recalled in an interview with Wiltshire Farm Foods: “Ever since I was a little lad, it was my dream to be part of the Olympics.
“But I ended up having to stop my gymnastics in my mid-teens because I got anaemia. It meant I just couldn’t train to the level that was needed, so I made the heartbreaking decision to stop.”
Iron deficiency anaemia is characterised by symptoms such as tiredness, shortness of breath, palpitations, pale skin, and headaches, with the cause, as the name suggests, being a lack of iron.
In women, it can be brought on by heavy periods and pregnancy. It can also be caused by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like aspirin and ibuprofen, piles, stomach ulcers, inflammation in the bowel or oesophagus and certain cancers.
Less common symptoms include tinnitus, food tasting strange, itchiness, a sore tongue, hair loss, difficulty swallowing, a desire to eat non-food items, ulcers in the corners of your mouth, restless legs and changes to your nails.
Baker had previously told The Telegraph that he had been “really upset” when he was forced to change his dream career path during his teenage years, in light of the diagnosis.
“When I was told aged 13 that I was anaemic and had to slow down my gymnastics training, which meant that I wouldn’t be able to continue at the level I was at, I was really upset,” he said.
“I’d lost my identity in a way. But then I just committed to something else: I went off and became a North of England pole-vaulting champion and did sports acrobatics.”
While speaking to Wiltshire Farm Foods, Baker also recalled becoming emotional when he was offered the chance to take part in the torch relay in his native County Durham ahead of the London 2012 Olympics.
“When I got to carry the torch through my home city it was a real lump in your throat kind of experience,” he said.
“I’ve still got the torch that I had in the relay, it’s a real prized possession of mine.”




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