Lola Anderson’s dad kept her diary dream alive

If you had told 14-year-old Lola Anderson that one day she would be an Olympic champion, she would not have believed you.
Twelve years ago, the teenager watched rowers Helen Glover and Heather Stanning win gold at London 2012. Overcome by a âhuge wave of inspirationâ, she now says, she pulled out her mini Jack Wills diary and wrote in pink highlighter:
“My name is Lola Anderson and I think it would be my biggest dream in life to go to the Olympics in rowing and if possible win a gold for GB.”
Immediately, Anderson says, she was so embarrassed by it that she ripped it out and threw it in the bin.
âI thought âthatâs just so embarrassing, Lola, youâre never going to do thatâ,â she recounted on BBC Radio 4âs Today programme.
Her father Don Anderson, a rower himself, found the note shortly afterwards while emptying her bin and pocketed it.
Seven years later, he handed the note back to her.
He had been diagnosed with terminal cancer and wanted her to have it âas a reminder and a memento that even when you don’t back yourself, your parents and loved ones always do”, Anderson recounted.
Don Anderson died two months later.
It was that treasured note which inspired Anderson to follow her teenage dream all the way to Paris 2024, where she and her team won gold in the women’s quad sculls on Wednesday.
âI know that heâd be so, so proud,â she said about her dad during a tearful interview with the BBC. âIâm thinking a lot about him right now.â
Anderson said she is really sorry to anyone who, like her mother and siblings, might have had a âminor heart attackâ as Team GB crossed the finish line ahead of the Netherlands by a hair to take gold.
Entering the final 500m, the Netherlands had a half-a-boat lengthâs lead ahead of GB and were rocketing towards the finish line.
Team GB matched their pace and it seemed the country would be celebrating a silver medal achievement.
That is until the final metres, so close to the finish line that the broadcasts had stopped measuring distance, that Anderson, along with teammates Hannah Scott, Lauren Henry and Georgie Brayshaw, nudged ahead at the final stroke.
Spectators and commentators were left to wonder whether Team GB had clinched the win, as the result was too close for officials to immediately call, but Anderson knew they had done it.
âWhen I heard Lauren scream, it sounded like a happy scream and not a gutted sort of crying tears,â she said.
âAnd thatâs when I started to realise what had happened.â

It was a moment laden with emotion, one that Anderson described as âbittersweet, but mostly sweetâ.
âThereâs the emotional side of âI wish [Dad] was here to see that, then the gratitude of âI have all of my other family around with me still’,â Anderson said.
âMy mum and my siblings were just screaming their heads off.â
Thinking back to that 14-year-old who was so overcome with Olympic dreams, Anderson said she would not recognise herself now.
As a young girl she said she struggled to see a place for herself in sport, âjust because often female athletes can struggle to feel like they keep their femininityâ.
But she said she has noticed that change recently.
âItâs just a whole, brand new world now where women are able to go out and say âno I want to be as strong as possible and that doesn’t change anything about meâ,â Anderson said.
âParticipating in sport has made me a much stronger version of myself, not just physically obviously, but in terms of what I can set my mind to do and what I feel like I am able to achieve.”
