Olympian and Strictly star Iwan Thomas has opened up about his mental health struggles and suicidal thoughts as he revealed Prince Harry's pivotal role in his recovery.

The Welsh sprinter who won silver at the Atlanta games in 1996 has spoken out as he releases a brutally honest account of his depression, which left him considering taking his life. Iwan, now aged 50, is renowned for taking gold at the 1997 World Championships and beating world records.

But the athlete also suffered from a serious bout of depression, speaking about how he struggled to get out of bed and felt "numb". Now an advocate for mental health, he wants to help others. He said: "Breaking that record, everything happened really quickly for me but also everything was taken away quickly.

"All sorts were coming my way, a Madame Tussauds' waxwork, MBE, accolades left right and centre. I thought, 'This is cool, I'll have years left in me yet'. The reality was that that was as good as it was ever going to get.

"It then started to unravel and injuries set in. I was at a low place, it was horrible. I felt if I suddenly spoke out that I was struggling it would be, 'Your rivals are now going to think you are not as tough as you say you are and won't fear you on the track'. I couldn't really show that side of me, the soft side. I always had to try to be the alpha male and the brash one who takes life in his stride."

Iwan with the men's 400m relay silver medal win (
Image:
Popperfoto/Getty Images)

Iwan continued to push his body, hoping to regain his form. "Athletics was a lot of my identity," he said. "Without it I felt I had nothing. Would I be important? Would people still like me? Those are all insecurities that I had.

"I couldn't let go of being an athlete and I should have retired way before I did. But I kept thinking my body could hold out. In the end it didn't." In his autobiography, Brutal, Iwan writes very movingly about how he was left sobbing, numb, unable to get out of bed.

During one of his darkest times, he took a bottle of whisky and walked to the Solent, looking into the water, wanting to disappear. "I think that was my lowest moment," said Iwan.

"If I had spoken to someone about it and shared my anxieties, I would have realised 'You will be alright, don't worry. Even if you are not an athlete any more, you will find your way and be OK.' I'd say to myself now, 'Put the bottle down, you idiot, go home and tell your mum and dad. They love you'."

Instead, he was caught up in the self-loathing, thinking: "Why me, why am I injured again?" "It was horrible," he added. "Athletics is very black and white. The stopwatch doesn't lie. You either run fast or you don't, there's no hiding place."

Eventually, in 2011, Iwan went for counselling. "I went for about a year. I felt I wasn't really getting anywhere. I remember the counsellor saying, 'One day it will click. Everything we spoke about will make sense to you'. And it did about six months after going."

A pivotal moment for him was in 2016 when he met Prince Harry at a Heads Together event, the mental health initiative set up alongside Prince William and Princess Kate. "It was the weirdest thing. I was there flipping burgers with Prince Harry," he said.

Iwan reveals how Prince Harry was one of the first people he ever opened up to about his mental health while at a Heads Together event (
Image:
PA)

"I hadn't ever really spoken about depression or dark times. I suddenly just opened up to him. It was very bizarre but because he was a stranger I felt I could talk to him. He's been through so much himself, it was easy to talk to him. It opened that tin and allowed me to talk to other people."

Iwan regrets not discussing his mental health earlier, particularly with his friends. He said: "I felt if I went to them and said I'm struggling here, they might ask, 'What have you got to feel sorry about? You've got a nice house, cars', and all the materialistic rubbish that as a young man I was into. It gave a false picture of where I was at mentally. I felt they would judge me. It couldn't have been further from the truth."

"It's a bit of a blokey thing not to talk. But by bottling it up, you'll feel worse. It doesn't matter what you do for a living, whether you are a member of the Royal family or you drive a taxi. If depression is going to get to you, it's going to get to you."

The athlete strutted on screen in 2015's series of Strictly (
Image:
BBC/Ray Burmiston/Matt Burlem)
Iwan is now a proud father of three (
Image:
Supplied)

Since hanging up his spikes, Iwan has forged a successful career as a broadcaster and will be covering the Olympics this year. He also maintains that exercise is crucial to his mental wellbeing after dancing on Britain's screens in 2015's Strictly Come Dancing.

Although he calls himself a "fairweather runner", he manages to make it to the gym at least four times a week, stating, "It's not just for the exercise, but for the companionship, to talk to other people." His most significant transformation, however, comes from fatherhood. He is a proud dad of three young boys Teddy, five, Dougie, two, and Bowie, five months, with his partner.

"Having my boys has been the best thing that has ever happened to me. I love being a dad. It puts a lot into perspective. Having gone through the highs, which were amazing, and also the lowest of lows, has made me more reflective on life, more patient and a better person." Brutal, Iwan’s autobiography, is out on Thursday (£18.99, Bloomsbury Sport).

  • Brutal, Iwan’s autobiography, is out on Thursday (£18.99, Bloomsbury Sport)

Anyone who is struggling can call the Samaritans 24 hours a day, seven days a week, on 116 123.