OLLY MURS is taking a leap into the unknown on a brutal 250-mile challenge for Unicefâs Soccer Aid.
In an exclusive chat with Bizarre, the singer revealed he will run, row and cycle from Manchester Unitedâs Old Trafford to West Hamâs London Stadium across five punishing days for Olly Murs: Into The Unknown.
He admitted that a life-changing trip to Romania had given the challenge a whole new meaning.
The Troublemaker star travelled to Eastern Europe to see the charityâs work first-hand, and was moved after meeting mum-of-one Oksana, who escaped Ukraine after Russia invaded and is now living in a Unicef facility in Romania.
âHer baby was only seven months old,â Olly said. âComing here in the middle of a war on her own, no family, no friends.
âThe story was tough to listen to.
âThe fact that eight weeks later, her house (in Ukraine) got bombed, itâs terrifying, isnât it?
âIt kind of puts things into perspective.â
The trip clearly hit home for Olly, who has a daughter, Madison, and baby son, Albert, with wife Amelia.
He explained: âAll I want to do is keep my baby safe and keep the (children) healthy and happy, and thatâs the same for every parent around the world.â
While the cause is inspiring, the 250 miles sounds absolutely brutal.
In a harsh twist, Olly wonât know exactly what heâll be facing each day.
He revealed: âIt does scare me because itâs really hard when youâre preparing for something when you donât know the distances.â
Even his birthday is being sacrificed to the cause.
Olly laughed: âThe 11th of May is when I start it â my birthday week.
âIâll be celebrating my birthday whilst running or cycling or rowing somewhere.â
Olly, who has undergone four knee operations, is worried about what impact the arduous challenge will have on his joints.
He added: âI donât know how my kneeâs going to cope. Itâs definitely going to have an effect on my body, and my knees.
âBut Iâm confident that Iâm fit enough to do it.â
Away from the graft of preparing for his charity challenge, Olly says his home life has become his priority, with music temporarily on the back burner.
âIâve really enjoyed just being at home and not singing any more,â he explained.
âIâm just singing and entertaining my kids.
âI posted a video the other day of me singing to my kids some of my songs and Maddie kept saying âNo.â
âItâs a tough crowd at home.â
Olly is now hoping heâll have an easier time on the pitch at Soccer Aid on May 31, when he will line up as part of the England squad alongside
Wayne Rooney, Tom Hiddleston, Gk Barry, Jill Scott, Angry Ginge and with SoccerAid founder Robbie Williams as coach.
The Soccer Aid World XI features ex-players Jordi Alba of Spain and Italyâs
Leonardo Bonucci, with the team being coached by Olympian Usain Bolt.






