From McDonald’s to tilt at boxing gold
RIO DE JANEIRO: Lawrence Okolie remembers very clearly what he was doing four years ago when fellow British heavyweight Anthony Joshua won Olympic gold — he was battling the bulge and working in McDonald’s.
Fast forward and the 23-year-old Okolie is here and taking inspiration from Joshua, who since Olympic glory in London 2012 has ploughed his way through the pro ranks to become the unbeaten IBF champion, boasting a perfect 17-0 record — all by knock-out.
Okolie, who took up boxing to fight his ballooning weight, hopes one day to emulate his friend to become a major name in the boxing world.
He says he admires how Joshua deals with the mounting expectation. “Watching him in world title fights kind of takes the pressure off this stuff,” said Okolie, who was unable to watch most of the London Games because he was working in the fast-food restaurant.
During a brief work break, Okolie did though manage to see Joshua become Olympic champion, and it made him think.
Okolie is relishing the battle here, but knows this is just the first step if he wants to become a respected professional heavyweight — and is keeping a sense of perspective. “Obviously the Olympics is a big show and getting an Olympic gold is one of the biggest things you can do, but at the same time, there’s world title fights, there’s wars, there’s massive things going on all around and all we’re doing is having a little fight,” he said.
Like Joshua, psychosocial studies university student Okolie comes into the Rio boxing competition — which starts on Saturday (tomorrow) — with limited boxing experience having qualified after just 23 amateur fights.
Unlike Joshua, Okolie will need to negotiate an Olympic boxing tournament that for the first time will have professional fighters — albeit only three of them in all.
Another major change sees no headguards and judges will decide who wins the bouts, rather than the unpopular punch-scoring system.
It is all designed to bring Olympic boxing closer to the professional fight game and Okolie is anticipating a real scrap for gold. “It makes it a bit more of a fight, which I kind of enjoy,” he said.
-
5 Celebrities You Didn't Know Have Experienced Depression -
Trump Considers Scaling Back Trade Levies On Steel, Aluminium In Response To Rising Costs -
Claude AI Shutdown Simulation Sparks Fresh AI Safety Concerns -
King Charles Vows Not To Let Andrew Scandal Overshadow His Special Project -
Spotify Says Its Best Engineers No Longer Write Code As AI Takes Over -
Michelle Yeoh Addresses 'Wicked For Good' Snub At 2026 Oscars -
Trump Revokes Legal Basis For US Climate Regulation, Curb Vehicle Emission Standards -
DOJ Blocks Trump Administration From Cutting $600M In Public Health Funds -
2026 Winter Olympics Men Figure Skating: Malinin Eyes Quadruple Axel, After Banned Backflip -
Meghan Markle Rallies Behind Brooklyn Beckham Amid Explosive Family Drama -
Scientists Find Strange Solar System That Breaks Planet Formation Rules -
Backstreet Boys Voice Desire To Headline 2027's Super Bowl Halftime Show -
OpenAI Accuses China’s DeepSeek Of Replicating US Models To Train Its AI -
Woman Calls Press ‘vultures’ Outside Nancy Guthrie’s Home After Tense Standoff -
Allison Holker Gets Engaged To Adam Edmunds After Two Years Of Dating -
Prince William Prioritises Monarchy’s Future Over Family Ties In Andrew Crisis