Boxer Anthony Ogogo played football as a schoolboy. He was captain
of the Suffolk Schools team and also played for Norwich City until
the age of 14 but when it came to a choice between football and
boxing he chose boxing.
Ogogo told The Guardian how he got involved with Boxing: "when
a couple of my friends fell out during a game of football at school
when I was 12. They came to blows but the mad thing was that the
smaller, weedier guy got the better of the other guy who was much
bigger and stronger. I asked him where he learnt to do that and
he said it was at Triple A Boxing Club in Lowestoft. I decided
to see what it was all about and because I did not want to go
on my own, I dragged along the friend that came off worse in the
dust-up! From the moment I walked into the gym I fell in love
with it and have been going ever since"
He claimed middleweight silver at the 2010 Commonwealth Games
in Delhi. In 2010 he also won the Amateur Boxing Association of
England title two years after taking the welterweight crown. Then
in November he took the middleweight title at the inaugural Great
Britain Championships a few days before turning 22
Previously he captained Great Britain's team in the World European
and Junior Olympic Tournaments. He won the Junior Olympics in
2004, picked up the Most Outstanding Boxer of the Tournament and
was crowned World Under 17 Champion in 2005.
At the London 2012 Olympic Games, he represented Team GB and
made the semi-finals, ensuring a medal, by beating Junior Castillo
Martinez (Dominican Republic) in the round of 32, Ievgen Khytrov
(Ukraine) in the round of 16 and Stefan Hartel (Germany) in the
quarter-finals