
Man loses over 50 kg in a year with a unique football game strategy
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The Facebook Scroll That Changed Everything
'I Was So Out of Breath'
Also Read: How an extremely busy man lost nearly half his body fat in 3 months without strict diet or long gym sessions
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From One Takeaway a Day to Balanced Meals
'I Felt Like a Monster'
'I Can Be a Father Again'
For years, Chris Martin from Suffolk felt like a prisoner in his own body. Tipping the scales at nearly 152 kg, the 39-year-old father of three had resigned himself to a life marked by breathlessness, takeaway dinners, and low self-esteem. But a humbling moment at his child's school sports day changed everything.'I struggled to take part in the parents' race,' Martin recalled while talking with Daily Mail. That moment of physical defeat became a turning point, and what followed was nothing short of transformative.In a story that sounds almost cinematic, Martin's path to reclaiming his health began with a casual scroll through Facebook. There, he discovered Man v Fat Football —a weight-loss-oriented six-a-side football league where goals and grams count equally.The initiative, which combines weekly weigh-ins with football matches, scores players based on both weight loss and match results. The unique blend of sport and accountability instantly appealed to Martin, a lifelong Ipswich Town supporter, who promptly signed up for his local Cambridge team.The first few matches were brutal. 'I was so out of breath during my first game,' Martin admitted. But with each week, the sport that had once left him gasping for air became the very vehicle that carried him toward fitness and renewed self-worth. Alongside the matches, participants received healthy recipes and nutritional advice, helping Martin rethink his entire relationship with food.Martin's lifestyle overhaul was dramatic. Gone were the solitary, calorie-heavy meals and the mindless biscuit binging during work hours. 'I used to eat one meal a day—and it was usually a takeaway. I'd snack constantly and never think about calories,' he told Daily Mail, which reported on his journey.Now, he's ditched the takeaways and shifted to three nutritious meals a day, full of vegetables and homemade curries. 'Before, I never ate vegetables. Now I try new things—we eat a lot of vegetable-based dishes,' he said.Beyond the physical toll, obesity had left Martin emotionally battered. 'It wasn't nice going out, thinking that I was a monster and people were looking at me,' he said. 'You can't go into shops to buy clothes. Everything had to be ordered from specialist stores. It was demoralising.'As of this June, Martin weighs around 100 kg—a loss of over 50 kg in under a year. Not only is he more mobile and confident, he's now the captain of his Man v Fat team.Perhaps the most profound change has been at home. 'To do things with my children and be present with them means the world to me,' he said. 'It feels like I can be a father again.'Chris Martin's story isn't just one of weight loss; it's about reclaiming life, joy, and dignity. From hiding behind oversized clothes to leading his team with pride, he's shown that sometimes all it takes is a football, a supportive league, and the will to change.As he puts it: 'I'm proud of actually doing it and I'm proud of what I've achieved.'

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