Read The Flying Pineapple Online

Authors: Jamie Baulch

The Flying Pineapple (4 page)

Chapter Nine
Blister Mister

Sport has been too much a part of my life for me to turn my back on it. When I retired, I started to work in the field of sports management but not in the usual way. I used my art skills from my school and college days and established a new style rugby calendar with the Welsh Rugby Union which enjoyed record sales. This led to further design consultancy work with them for the Six Nations programme covers. In 2006, I was asked to become the team attaché for the Wales Commonwealth Games team. I acted as a representative for Wales and felt incredibly proud to be given such an honour. As part of my role, I put together the team kit, to ensure that they not only felt like a team, but looked like a team as well. I brought in a designer clothing label team to make suits and organised everything, even down to the hair products!

I attended numerous functions and the highlight was to be given the task of making Welsh cakes for a large group of Australians in Melbourne at a food festival for the Games. I had to talk as I cooked – the talking wasn't difficult, but following the recipe book at the same time was! I'd never cooked Welsh cakes before but a quick call to my mum back at home had put me on the right track.

I now manage Definitive Sports, a sports management company involved with current key athletes such as Wales and Ospreys rugby player Shane Williams, Olympic bronze medallist Tasha Danvers, 11-time Paralympic gold medallist Dave Roberts, the British, European and Commonwealth Champion hurdler Dai Greene and many more. I also enjoy working as a director of Superschools, an organisation which gets Olympic athletes into schools to exercise with kids and encourages them to participate in sport while raising their awareness of a healthy and active lifestyle. I see in the kids the same enthusiasm I had for sport at their age. I'm a consultant to the Jaguar Academy of Sport which features great sporting names like the cricketer Sir Ian Botham, and athletes such as Dame Kelly Holmes and Denise Lewis. I try to use the skills I learnt from my sport in my new career in business. The same ethics apply as far as I am concerned – train hard, work hard, focus on the job and get the result.

Many of these principles are included in the BBC's project
Raise your Game
and it's great for me to be an ambassador for this, linking up again with my ex-mentor Colin Jackson who leads the project. There are no short cuts in life, as in sport. You won't succeed on the track if you're lazy and it's the same in life. In sport, you have to take risks but you have prepared your body well to do this. In business, if you prepare properly, the results will come. My years as part of a relay team have meant that I am used to working with and respecting others. As the great coaches always say: ‘There is no “I” in team.'

Recently, I was awarded an honorary fellowship by the University of Wales to mark my commitment to the people and community of south-east Wales. I consider it an amazing honour to be given the same award as Lord Kinnock and Sir Terry Matthews and I'm immensely proud that my family were able to share in this special day. Taking part in the awards ceremony, I realised how impressive it is to be a student and collect your reward for years of study. I didn't go to university but I said in my speech how important it was to me to be recognised for my years of commitment and hard work in the world of athletic competition. I made everyone laugh when I gave my speech but I ended by saying that the degree really belonged to my mum and dad, my girlfriend and my two sons because of all that they have done for me to help make this happen.

I still love to train regularly and still set myself goals to achieve. In 2010 I was asked, as an Olympic athlete, to race against a horse at Kempton Park racecourse over 100 metres, earning £10,000 for charity. This was the first race of its kind and although Peopleton Brook, the race horse, certainly beat me, I loved doing it for Barnado's Cymru and since then I have been made an official ambassador for the charity. This event gave me great personal satisfaction. It's a way of raising money for a good cause and I'm one of the few who is mad enough to accept the challenge!

I love athletics. To make a living out of something you love doing it is very special. I wish the same for my sons so that they can feel as fulfilled and be as happy as I have been. My sons are free to do whatever they want to do and I want them to have choice. Both have their mum's talent for drama and both have made starts at their own acting careers. I will be proud of them whatever they do. I just want them to be happy, and to be the best dad for them. They know that I will be there to support and encourage them to be the best they can be. I have learnt in my career that it pays to respect others and to give your best. And it's important to look for opportunities to showcase what you have, rather than worrying about what everyone else has.

Probably the biggest lesson that I have learnt from sport is how to take defeat graciously and how to be humble when you are successful. But I have always believed that whatever you do, either in sport or in life, you should do it with a smile on your face. If you enjoy something you will make more of an effort to do it to the best of your ability. Always be yourself no matter how much pressure you get from those around you. A good friend of mine said to me, ‘You're your own sun.' I asked her what she meant and she said that I didn't need a sun to make myself shine. I took that as the most wonderful compliment. I have always tried to share my positive attitude with those around me.

The gym for me now is a social place rather than my workplace. My competitive spirit isn't quite lost though, as I have committed myself to enter for the London Marathon. My challenge is to beat Iwan Thomas. The old rivalry is still there between two Welshmen. My father used to say to me when I went out to compete: ‘Blister mister', meaning
give it all you've got
. I hope I have done that and will continue to live life to the maximum. I may not run any more, but I'll never slow down.

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is a compelling read that will provoke debate among rugby fans and provide a great starting point to anyone interested in the game.

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Life's New Hurdles

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In 2003 Colin retired from athletics in front of an adoring home crowd. Then real life began. In Life's New Hurdles Colin describes the shock of adjusting to sudden change. How would he manage without the strict routine of training and competing that had been his life since the age of 17? Would he forever long to be back on the track? And how satisfying would his new career be as a sports presenter and television personality? From athletics commentating to
Strictly Come Dancing
, Colin describes the challenges and joys of starting a whole new life.

About the Author

Jamie Baulch was born in Nottingham, adopted by Welsh parents and brought up in Newport, South Wales. From an early age he was one of the best in his school at sport. Discovered by his teacher, Mr Atkins, Jamie became one of the most recognisable athletes in Welsh and World athletics. His first medal was gold in the men's 4 × 100m relay in the 1991 European Junior Championships. He has won five World Championship medals, one Olympic Games medal, two European Championship medals, two Commonwealth Games medals and two IAAF World Cup medals. Recently, he was awarded a World Championship gold medal as part of the 4 × 400m relay team after the Americans were disqualified for using drugs. He retired in 2005.

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