Connect with us

Sports

Gordon Ramsay videos and TikTok: How Olympian Dennis Ombachi learned to live with bipolar disorder | CNN

Published

on

221027052331-01-dennis-ombachi-rugby-sevens-tik-tok-spt-intl.jpg


Advertisement



CNN
 — 

In sport there is nothing more revered than scoring the winning points in the last minute, snatching victory from the jaws of defeat. All of sports’ greatest matches have that moment which stick in fans’ forever. But not for Kenya rugby’s Dennis Ombachi.

Advertisement

When looking back at the try that he scored after the buzzer had gone, to send the Kenya Sevens team to the Olympics, he tells CNN Sport, “I really can’t remember much. What I remember is getting the hooter and hearing the coaches, the late Benjamin Ayimba [Kenya’s head coach] and the technical bench just screaming Omba, Omba!”

From inside his own 22, Ombachi handed off two Zimbabwe tackles before storming down the pitch to score the try that qualified Kenya for the inaugural Olympic Rugby Sevens event.

Advertisement

Ombachi would be a part of the Kenya team that went to Rio and rubbed shoulders with the greatest athletes in the world, becoming a regular with the team on the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series.

But at the height of his powers, the Kenyan star suffered a severe leg break, side-lining him for the best part of a year.

Advertisement

But it was Ombachi’s mental health that would take a bigger hit than his broken leg. Being forced to move home and with nothing to do but wait for his leg to heal, Ombachi struggled to cope and eventually attempted to take his own life.

“Bones and muscles eventually do heal. But what I really didn’t factor in was the mental toll that it was going to take on me and which dragged on, even up to now that I still suffer a bit from it,” Ombachi recalls.

Advertisement

Thanks to intervention from friends and family, Ombachi was hospitalized and finally diagnosed with bipolar disorder, a mental illness characterized by manic highs, depressive lows and possible periods of psychosis.

But Ombachi also remembers that what also helped him through that dark phase of life was his hobby, cooking.

Advertisement

The winger had always loved food and cooking, a hobby that benefited from a career that took him all over the world.

“My love of food is intertwined with playing rugby because it started when playing the HSBC legs, you tour close to 18 countries a year and all these countries, they have their own culture, languages and food. We used to eat different kind of foods,” Ombachi tells CNN Sport.

Advertisement

“I used to come back home and challenge myself to try and create some of the different dishes I had here and there. I think that’s how the passion grew.”

Ombachi says that the support from teammates, captains and coaches helped him through depressive episodes.

In particular, renowned chef Gordon Ramsay was an inspiration for the house-bound athlete.

Advertisement

“Through his YouTube channel I managed to understand the fundamentals, the principles and how to use your tastebuds,” said Ombachi.

“That’s what actually got me through most of my depressive moments, especially the times I was injured,” he says before adding with a laugh, “In cooking, Gordon Ramsay was my mentor although he doesn’t know about it.”

Advertisement

When Ombachi returned to playing his career took another hit, this time in the shape of the Covid-19 pandemic.

With the Sevens circuit canceled and the Kenya Rugby Union terminating his contract, Ombachi suddenly was once again stuck indoors and without an income.

Advertisement

So Ombachi got back in the kitchen. And with a DSLR camera that his former captain and mentor Humphrey Kayange brought back to him, Ombachi began making cooking videos and posting them on Instagram and Twitter.

He quickly developed a style that in his videos would set him apart from other content creators. These were rapid-fire videos, with Ombachi narrating and punctuating every step of the process by saying, “Done!”

Advertisement

Ombachi started off with a fairly large audience in Kenya as an athlete who was always very active on Twitter and Instagram, but it would be a different platform, TikTok, that would make Ombachi become a global phenomenon.

Specifically, it was a single video that made the player, now living permanently in Nairobi, explode.

Advertisement

“From time to time I cook plenty of food and then hand it out to the kids on the streets so I shot a video one time of me doing the same,” said Ombachi.

“I cooked, handed out the food and it went viral on Twitter, TikTok and Instagram. From that video alone I managed to gain more than 300,000 followers.”

Advertisement

The video shows Ombachi preparing chicken stew with chapatis, boxing it up and handing out to children on a Nairobi street, now has over 15 million views on TikTok alone.

“I think this [cooking for street kids] comes from when I was back in high school. There was a time I was a little bit depressed, a little bit lost. So I decided to run away from school. I knew I didn’t want to go home. So I ran away and I was a street kid for a week.

Advertisement

“I made lots of street kid friends and it made me understand and empathize with them, that they are regular human beings just going through the same problems like all of us. My opportunities are just better than theirs. “

Just as when he was representing Kenya around the world, Dennis remembers his roots and the people he represents. That is one of the chief reasons he is so open with his mental health struggles.

Advertisement

According to the World Health Organization’s 2017 report on world mental health, Kenya was the fifth highest ranked country in Africa for cases of depression and that an estimated one in 10 people suffer from a common mental disorder.

The government set up a mental health taskforce in 2019 to address the crisis, but as a country that is overwhelmingly rurally based, there is a lot still needed to do.

Advertisement

Plenty of athletes and social media figures have used their platform to speak out about mental health and partner with organizations and charities to spread awareness.

Ombachi supports that work, but he also sees an important role for those with public profiles to simply embrace their struggles with mental health.

Advertisement

“If you have regular people living their regular life lives talking about it … then it hits the spot more.”

With two young children at home now, Ombachi is looking for a more stable lifestyle than that of a globetrotting rugby player.

Advertisement

He is also following in the footsteps of his “mentor” Gordon Ramsay and is setting up his own Nairobi based masterclass to teach people how to cook gourmet food.

Advertisement



Source link

Advertisement

Sports

Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka found it tough to face ‘hate’ in locker room | CNN

Published

on

By

230322045248-01-aryna-sabalenka-032123-restricted.jpg


Advertisement



Reuters
 — 

Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka said she struggled to understand the “hate” she encountered in the locker room amid strained relations between some players following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Advertisement

The world number two has previously said she has nothing against Ukrainian people and felt bad for them as Moscow’s action rages on. Belarus has been a staging area for the invasion, which Moscow calls a “special military operation.”

“It was really tough for me because I’ve never faced that much hate in the locker room,” Sabalenka said ahead of the Miami Open. “There are a lot of haters on Instagram when you’re losing matches, but in the locker room I’ve never faced that.

Advertisement

“It was really tough to understand that there’s so many people who hate me for no reason. I did nothing.”

Sabalenka won the Australian Open in January.

Australian Open champion Sabalenka lost in the final of Indian Wells to Elena Rybakina on Sunday.

Advertisement

Earlier in the tournament, Ukraine’s Lesia Tsurenko withdrew from her match against Sabalenka over a panic attack triggered by a conversation with WTA chief Steve Simon about tennis’s response to Russia’s invasion.

Sabalenka said she had been having “weird conversations” with members of some players’ teams in the last year.

Advertisement

“It was really tough, but now it’s getting better,” she said.

World number one Iga Swiatek has called for more support to be offered to Ukrainian players, saying the tennis leadership was not doing enough, but two-time grand slam champion Victoria Azarenka of Belarus said that was not the case.

Advertisement
Sabalenka said she faced 'hate in the locker room.'

“There are certain players that have different feelings and behaviors. Overall, I don’t necessarily share the same opinion as Iga does,” Azarenka said.

“I’d encourage her to look at the things that have been done before she makes comments. As a player council member, I’m happy to provide the facts. That would be a more appropriate way to have that conversation.”

Advertisement



Source link

Advertisement

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

‘At times I was really pissed off to be part of that era’: Novak Djokovic speaks to CNN about competing with Nadal and Federer | CNN

Published

on

By

230308120201-01-novak-djokovic-aus-open-2023.jpg


Advertisement



CNN
 — 

Although all-time tennis great Novak Djokovic says that his rivalry with Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer made him the player he is today, initially the Serbian was “pissed off” to be part of the golden era.

Advertisement

“They made me stronger, both mentally, physically, my game was improved because of all these matches that we played against each other, mostly because of the matches that I lost to them, some big matches,” the 22-time grand slam champion told CNN’s Becky Anderson in an exclusive interview Tuesday.

In his first interview since withdrawing from the Miami Open over visa issues, Djokovic said he has “no regrets” after ceding the world No. 1 ranking to Carlos Alcaraz and having to also miss Indian Wells in the United States this month.

Advertisement

Djokovic is not allowed to travel to the US because of his decision not to be vaccinated against Covid-19.

On Monday, Djokovic ceded the top men’s singles ranking – which the 35-year-old has held more weeks than any other player – to the 19-year-old Spaniard after he was forced to miss Indian Wells. Djokovic is also missing the Miami Open this week.

Advertisement

“No, I have no regrets,” Djokovic said in an interview with Anderson. “I’ve learned through life that regrets only hold you back and basically make you live in the past. And I don’t want to do that. I also don’t want to live too much in the future. I want to be as much as in the present moment, but of course think about future, create a better future.

Novak Djokovic has spent more weeks at No. 1 than any other player.

“So I congratulate Alcaraz. He absolutely deserves to come back to No. 1.

Advertisement

“It’s a pity that I wasn’t able to play in Indian Wells [and] Miami. I love those tournaments. I had plenty of success there. But at the same time, it is the conscious decision I made and I knew that there is always a possibility that I won’t go. And it is the current state or current situation that I hope will change for later this year for the US Open. That is the most important tournament for me on the American soil.”

Djokovic reiterated that at this stage in his career, the grand slams are what matter the most to him, and he will wait and see if he can go to New York.

Advertisement

“I really want to be playing there, want to be there,” Djokovic said. “I actually had in 2021 when I lost in the finals against (Daniil) Medvedev, probably one of the best moments I ever had with the New York crowd. And I’ve been fortunate to win that tournament three times, play many finals. And even though I lost that match, I received a lot of love and appreciation from people and I want to go back and I want to reconnect with the crowd there. So that’s something I’m looking forward to and hopefully it will happen.”

For now, Djokovic’s focus has shifted to the upcoming clay court season in Europe. Of his 22 grand slam singles titles – tying him with Rafael Nadal for the most in men’s tennis – Djokovic has won the French Open, the next major on the tennis calendar, twice.

Advertisement
Novak Djokovic won the Australian Open in January.

Djokovic was a keynote speaker at the Dubai Future District Fund’s First Annual General Meeting, where he talked about his business interests and foundation. He is part of a generation of athletes taking their career earnings and endorsements and turning them into business empires.

“I think some experiences are transferrable, not all of them, but I think character is, and I guess when you are successful in your core business… you want to continue in striving to be successful in other areas and it’s a kind of logical or a natural transition to a next phase of your life,” he explained to CNN.

Advertisement

His portfolio of vested interests is varied and includes biotech, education, sustainability and clean energy, he said.

“I’ve been trying to be sensitive and conscious about the fact that I have to start preparing my future as early as possible and surrounding myself with smart people who have the experience of being in that journey, in that area, in that sector that I’m interested in for quite some time because I’m new.”

Advertisement

While Djokovic joint-leads the rankings of men’s grand slam singles titles, he trails both Serena Williams and Margaret Court on the all-time list. That’s something he will look to change this year and was full of admiration for Williams’ achievement.

“She keeps, keeps inspiring myself, all the tennis players around the world. And she’s been really an icon of our sport for so many years,” he said.

Advertisement



Source link

Advertisement

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Martina Navratilova says her prognosis is ‘excellent’ after double cancer diagnosis — TalkTV interview | CNN

Published

on

By

230321113415-01-martina-navratilova-file-2022-restricted.jpg


Advertisement



CNN
 — 

Tennis great Martina Navratilova says her “prognosis is excellent” having been diagnosed with throat and breast cancer.

Advertisement

In an interview with Piers Morgan Uncensored on TalkTV, Navratilova said: “I mean, as far as they know I’m cancer-free … I definitely won’t be missing any of my check-ups. I will be very, very diligent about it, but the prognosis is excellent. But you never know.”

The 66-year-old Navratilova, who won 59 grand slam singles and doubles titles over the course of her illustrious career, discovered an enlarged lymph node in her neck during the WTA Finals in Fort Worth, Texas last year.

Advertisement

After a biopsy, she was later diagnosed with stage one throat cancer, her agent Mary Greenham told CNN in January. While undergoing throat tests, a suspicious form was found in Navratilova’s breast, which later was diagnosed as cancer, Greenham said.

“It was again very up and down, right?” Navratilova said in the TalkTV interview airing Tuesday.

Advertisement

“So, I find out it’s throat cancer, I think I could be dying but I find out no, it’s very treatable. Then they found the right breast and when I had the biopsy on the right breast, the doctor was saying: ‘This doesn’t look great.’

“And when she said that I’m like: ‘Oh great, I have another cancer?’ And that’s when I started crying on the table as she’s still poking in there getting samples out of my boob and I’m like: ‘Oh great, I have two cancers at the same time that are not related.’”

Advertisement
Navratilova plays a backhand at the 1993 US Open.

Navratilova, who was previously diagnosed with breast cancer in 2010, spoke of her determination after receiving her double diagnosis.

“What was the alternative? Giving up? Giving in? Stopping?” she said. “That’s just not an option for me … quitting is just not in my DNA.”

Advertisement

Since retiring from tennis, Navratilova has worked as a coach, broadcaster and ambassador for the WTA Tour. She still holds the WTA record of 167 singles titles, 10 more than her long-time friend and rival Chris Evert, who said in January she is “cancer-free” having been diagnosed with stage 1 ovarian cancer.

After Greenham put out a request for friends to send a message and song to Navratilova, Evert sent Bill Withers’ “Lean On Me.”

Advertisement

“I couldn’t even read that stuff,” said Navratilova. “When Mary first sent it to me, I just started crying … I started reading it and I’m like: I cannot listen to the music because I’ll definitely be bawling my eyes out.

“One day at a time, I read a little bit from what everybody wrote because it was so moving.”

Advertisement



Source link

Advertisement

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending