Price ready to join the greats of Welsh boxing
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Published
An Olympic gold medallist with the chance to join the greats of Welsh boxing as a world champion, Lauren Price is no ordinary sporting star.
As an eight-year-old child, Price wrote in a school letter that her three ambitions for her life were to become a kickboxing world champion, to play international football for Wales and to compete at the Olympic games.
A former four-time world champion kickboxer and international footballer, Price has made her childhood dreams come true.
Now she looks to become Walesâ 14th world champion boxer â and the first female â as she challenges American Jessica McCaskill for the WBA, IBO and Ring Magazine welterweight titles at Cardiffâs Utilita Arena, in a fight that will be broadcast live on BBC 2 Wales.
After successfully ticking off her childhood bucket list before she even turned professional, Price says she is now focusing on the âlegacyâ part of her career.
âI want to do for Wales what Katie Taylor has done for Ireland,â she says.
âThey used to call me Tiggerâ
Price says she owes everything she has in life to her grandparents Derek and Linda.
At just three days old it was decided her parents would not be able to care for her and her grandparents âsaved me from a life in careâ.
Their home in Ystrad Mynach became Priceâs home and it was obvious from an early age that sport was to be Priceâs primary focus and salvation.
Nicknamed Tigger because of her boundless energy, Price spent her childhood and teenage years training relentlessly at both football and kickboxing.
Her first kickboxing coach, Rob Taylor, remembers her insatiable work-rate.
âShe just had such an appetite for working. She always wanted to hit the pads,â he recalls.
âShe was training seven, eight, nine, 10 hours a week. Three, four nights a week. Her gran and granddad would bring her along. Sheâs back again, back again.
âWeâd try a competition and sheâd do well in that. Then weâd move on and on. Her work-rate was infectious.â
Price won four senior world kickboxing titles, as well as a host of European golds, and her grandparents were with her every step of the way.
By the age of 14 she was no longer allowed to play football with boys, so she moved to Georgetown Girls in Merthyr Tydfil and then Cardiff City Women.
âIn training sheâd be there early. Sometimes before Iâd even set the cones up. And sheâd be there right until the end,â her former coach Lesley-Ann Judd remembers.
âIf she needed to work on something, sheâd work on it. She listened and everything was just perfected.â
Price represented Wales at under-16, under-17, under-19 and senior level â all before her 17th birthday.
She went on to play for her country 52 times across all age groups and captained Wales Under-19s, winning two senior caps.
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âKelly Holmes inspired meâ
Before she was even 18 Price had ticked off two of her three ambitions, but the desire to be an Olympian never wavered, something that had stuck with her since watching middle distance runner Dame Kelly Holmes win Olympic gold.
Raised by her grandmother Linda to believe that her dreams were achievable if she worked hard enough, Price briefly tried taekwondo â she moved to Manchester and lived with future Olympic gold medal winner Jade Jones â but the sport was not quite right.
Better with her hands than legs, Price tried boxing and in 2014 she was given the chance to box for Team Wales, before joining the Team GB set-up after the 2016 Olympics.
Price was a ânatural talentâ, according to GB Boxing performance director Rob McCracken, still her trainer today, but she had worked extremely hard even to reach Sheffield.
Welsh boxer Kyren Jones, who boxed for Team Wales with Price at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, recalls how different her life was to the rest of the Welsh squad.
âWeâd work all week and then try and recover over the weekend,â he told BBC Sport Wales.
âBut Lauren, sheâd be out on Friday and Saturday night, working for her grandparents driving a taxi. She was just relentless. She is someone Iâve always looked up to.â
Price recalls âferrying the drunks to and from Cardiffâ as she maintained her Olympic dream.
Gold in Tokyo and MBE
Price won gold at the delayed Tokyo Olympics, fulfilling her lifelong ambition as she beat Chinaâs Li Qian, the world champion, in the final.
Sadly, grandfather Derek was not there to see it, having died in November 2020 having suffered with dementia.
Price, who always showed off her medals to her grandfather, returned home and placed her gold medal next to the vase that contained his ashes.
âHe was a massive part of my life and career and when I won gold you saw me looking up,â Price says. âI believe he was looking down on me that day. No matter what, him and my nan will always be a massive part of my life.
âHe was my number one fan.â
Awarded an MBE for her services to sport, Priceâs childhood dreams had all come true before she even turned professional.
âReach for the moon and if you fall short you will still land on the starsâ
Price switched over to the pro ranks after the Olympics, revealing her phone âblew upâ with offers from all the major UK boxing promoters.
She opted to join Boxxerâs stable and fight on Sky Sports, and has looked extremely impressive in the welterweight division, winning every round of her six pro fights.
Now, however, she fights the top welterweight, McCaskill, bidding to make history as Walesâ first female world champion.
Walesâ 13th world champion, Joe Cordina, has no doubt his friend will get the job done.
âItâs in touching distance for her, all she has to do is grab it now,â he said.
âI hope she enjoys every second of it. Fighting for a world title in your home country is special, she should soak it all up. I believe she will win, but she might not fight in Cardiff again.â
Another former Welsh world champion, Barry Jones, says Price is a âspecialâ talent.
âMcCaskill is a top 10 pound-for-pound fighter⊠on paper itâs a big ask, itâs too big an ask even,â he said.
âBut I think Lauren wins and I think she walks it. If she frustrates her with her movement, Price will go to work and put on a dominant performance. I think she will put on a masterclass.â
Price feels her time has come to add her name to the greats of Welsh boxing.
âI havenât been out of my comfort zone yet, Iâve won every round of every pro fight Iâve had, Iâve enjoyed myself. I do think Jessica is going to be my toughest test, she is going to ask questions of me,â she added.
âBut I believe I will win and put on a classy performance as well. There is so much more to come from me that people havenât seen yet.
âAs my nan used to say to me, âreach for the moon and if you fall short, you will still land on the starsâ.â
You can watch Lauren Price v Jessica McCaskill for the world welterweight title on BBC Two Wales, Saturday, 11 May at 21:00 BST and later on demand.
BBC Wales has also been given exclusive access to the Price camp in the days before the fight.
You can watch the full documentary on BBC Two Wales at 19:00 BST on Friday, 10 May and later on demand.
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Published1 December 2021
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