By Alex Horlock
PUBLISHED: 11:29 GMT, 21 September 2012 | UPDATED: 13:23 GMT, 21 September 2012
Team GB’s double Olympic medal-winning gymnast Louis Smith has said he could quit the sport before Rio 2016 because he may be ‘too old’ to challenge for a podium place.
At only 23, Smith, who won a bronze medal in the men’s team gymnastics and silver in the pommel horse at the London Games, also has other goals he wants to pursue.
Although the Peterborough gymnast is currently in training for both gymnastics and hit TV show Strictly Come Dancing, Smith wants to launch a clothing range or start a property business, and believes these other ventures would be incompatible with full-time training.
But Smith would be 27 in Rio, the same age as Krisztian Berki, the Hungarian who beat him to gold in London.
When asked whether retiring before the Brazil Games would be too early, Smith told Sportsmail: ‘It’s not to do with it (retirement) being early. It’s to do with being 27 and being past my day.
‘I mean, what happened in London, I was 23-years-old and in the peak of my career, I did the best routine of my life.
‘I’m not going to do better than that, so what am I going to achieve in Rio? Another bronze? Another silver? It’s not going to compare to this summer.’
‘Like I said, I would love to get to Rio, but it (retirement) is an option. I have got to think about life, life is bigger than Rio.’
He added: ‘I wouldn’t class it as giving up or quitting. I can look back on my career and I have 11 major international competition medals.
‘I’ve got three Olympic medals, I can look back and say if I was to retire, “I have had a fantastic run”. I wouldn’t be giving up, I would be retiring on a massive high.
‘But I’ve got to think about my future. I’ve got a lot of things that I want to do. Like my fashion range, my clothing range, my property - I want to set up a business.
‘I can’t really do all those things and train full-time so I will make a decision about what I am going to do.’
For now though, Smith is starring in the new series of BBC ballroom dance show Strictly Come Dancing.
Although used to spending hours training to be among the world’s best on the pommel horse, Smith said the regime for the TV show was just as tough.
Smith, who was running a training session for children at his gym in Peterborough for Sky Sports Living for Sports, said: ‘To be completely honest, it’s hard work. My body’s aching, I’m getting ill, I’m getting run down.
‘Lots of people say you must find it easy compared to gym. But it is hard work, to do what they do.
‘I train 10 to 4 and then my partner will stay longer and carry on dancing. I’m in bits.’
Louis Smith is supporting Sky Sports Living for Sport, a free secondary schools initiative that uses sport stars and sport skills to skills to improve the lives of thousands young people across the UK.
Find out more and get involved at: www.skysports.com/livingforsport
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