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22 hours to beat

Previous South Downs Way record-holder sets out to regain his crown


Posted: 11 June 2007
by Mike Davis

Around this time last year we reported on the new record set by Cannondale's Mike Cotty - the 212 miles from Eastbourne to Winchester and back along the South Downs Way in 22 hours and 25 minutes. In that story, we mentioned that Ian Butler (who we described as being from Tunbridge Wells but is actually resident in nearby Groombridge) was the previous holder of the record. Well, now Ian is aiming to get it back...

Thanks to Whyte Racing UK, the 45 year old outdoors fanatic has a Whyte E-5 full suspension bike at his disposal to tackle the 212 miles (and not-inconsiderable 22,000ft of climbing) on the route.

"I stopped to chat to loads of people last time and wasn't under any pressure," says Ian. "Now the heat is turned up and I want the record back."

Ian will be backed on the ride by Whyte Racing UK, wife Sarah, coach Andy Meyers and other friends who will drive the route in cars and provide food and drink at five dedicated stops along the way. He's been training at home on an indoor turbo-trainer riding three hours a day (and presumably either watching a lot of DVDs or being blessed with a quite extraordinary boredom threshold) and regularly cycles the 54 mile round trip to his parents' home in Orpington.

Ian said: "I am stopping only to wolf down some energy bars and will carry drinks with me so I should take minutes off the record. I want it back. Last time it didn't matter - it was incidental. This time I am really focussed."

He works in IT for a large insurance firm in Tunbridge Wells and describes himself as an 'incidental' cyclist: "I love rock climbing - that is my sport. And on this route I will be riding a total climb in miles higher than the Lhotse face of the Annapurna in Nepal."

Whyte Racing's Andy Jeffries, from Eastbourne, commented: "We went for a training ride with Ian and he blew us away. This guy climbs like a rocket sledge on rails. It'll be champagne all round if he gets the record back."

We're not sure that climbing like a sledge is necessarily a good thing, but best of luck to Ian - he'll be starting at the distinctly antisocial time of 2.30am on Saturday 16 June.


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Discuss this story

I am going to come and have a go at a 21-22 shortly - A comfy eight and a half hours one way last weekend!!

Posted: 11/06/2007 10:31

Holy moly! Took us 13 hours one way last week. But then we did get lost twice (the 4 extra miles definitely added the extra 5 hours).
Posted: 11/06/2007 10:36

Its nice to know there's still a few maniacs around on MTBs! Best of luck!
Posted: 11/06/2007 11:03

A few of us from the Norwood Paragon rode down to Brighton on Fri night from Mogador (Kingswood) via NDW to Cranleigh, Downslink to Bramber and SDW to Devil's Dyke then Brighton.
Whilst not too tough compared to the SDW x 2 it's a ride I would reccomend especially if done at midnight allowing for dawn on the Downslink and breakfast in Brighton which provides a welcome goal.

Not sure of exact distance, but it's about 60+ miles I think and we did it in a steady 7hr 40mins total ride time allowing for a 15mins power-nap near Henfield.

Some of you may recall the C2C ride (Croydon to Coast) done by Addiscombe CC several years ago. We followed a modified / improved darker (!) route from that original ride which I did with Sylvain et al.
MRB
Posted: 11/06/2007 12:14

Will Ian have a dedicated gate opening team?!

I had my first experience of the SDW yesterday, riding from Devils Dyke to Alfriston and back and found the gates an increasing hinderance to my speed, particularly as I got more tired.
Posted: 11/06/2007 12:23

As you get to know the SDW you know which way they go so can time it as to remain seated whilst leaning forward and opening the gate latches. I am interested in this record.. is it in any way regulated as I think George Budd (3rd at Mayhem last year) may have already gone under 20 hours for both ways..?
Posted: 11/06/2007 15:13

Nah, he didn't, he took a fair while longer than that!
Posted: 11/06/2007 18:21

The Lhotse face is on Everest, not Annapurna. Or is it Box Hill? At any rate, it's not on Annapurna...
Posted: 11/06/2007 21:11

Its the Rykers Face on Box Hill is't it?
Posted: 11/06/2007 21:21

No, that's on Kangchenjunga...
Posted: 11/06/2007 21:28

Psycho is all I can say!
Best of luck and if you feel like giving us a tow on the one in July you're more than welcome.
Posted: 11/06/2007 23:08

2nd july i'm doing it to eastbourne... then having a party! wahey!
Posted: 11/06/2007 23:09

Hehe, i'm aiming to do the whole of the south downs in an even more impressive time - one summer! ;-) (and that's only one way!)

I'm way too unfit having hardly cycled for a couple of years, so just completing it in stages will be an achievement for me. My wife's going to ride it too tho, and she's new to mountain biking.
Posted: 12/06/2007 10:25

I have the pleasure of working with Ian and I can confirm that he is a bit of a mentalist :)
Posted: 12/06/2007 11:43

I've done it but I didn't get the ride? Its just one big slog. Views are good but the riding is incredibly samey. Steep chalk climb followed by gradual chalk gravel climb. Long flat then gradual descent followed by steeper descent. Repeat 40 times. Start Winchester finish Eastbourne or reverse. For a curious reason which I also don't understand is its harder going East to West? Anybody worked that one out?
Posted: 13/06/2007 10:25

Yes - look at the trees along the route and you'll see why. Prevailing wind direction. It's also very slightly more uphill, but in the grand scheme of things it's insignificant.
Posted: 13/06/2007 10:33

Are you the same Ian Leitch who used to attend Newcastle Uni?
Posted: 13/06/2007 12:24

Yep, I did it with Sharon last year and took 23.5hrs. So that makes her the quickest girlie.

Good luck Ian SDWx2 is damn boring. Up, down, up, down, up, down etc.... Even more boring than 30-odd Mayhem laps, at least then people are shouting at you (usually "Get out of the way you're all over the place!").

Good luck,

GB
Posted: 13/06/2007 22:19

@ ian leich
AFAIK this record is not regulated. And it should remain that way.
With Rory H from USE, I’ve done (most of) the double – I managed Brighton-Winchester and back.
When I did it, it was the same day as the “official” SDW randonee – it’s quite a buzz arriving at the startline of the randonnee having ridden there from the other end of the SDW, and mingling with sleepy-eyed, clean, cyclists!
Rory and I have discussed the “official” nature of the record, and both think it should remain an “underground” kind of thing. Why? Because you can have multiple records – the fastest supported record, the fastest unsupported, fastest pair, etc. Also, the more official you make it, the more it loses its mythical appeal.

And to the person who said the SDW is boring – you are so, so wrong. Firstly, riding it at night is stunning – it’s a very remote feeling ride. And the downhills on the SDW are fantastic.

Posted: 14/06/2007 15:07

Sorry Andy, but I meant riding it twice non-stop was boring. I've had lots of great day rides up there, just riding along it for 202miles lost its appeal after a few hours... And the DHs are very very fast, yes, but hardly technical.

GB
Posted: 15/06/2007 17:33

Think he probably meant Odom.
Posted: 15/06/2007 18:16

Having ridden the chalk trails a few times with Trailbreaks, in day and night, I have to say the camaraderie is the best thing about riding the SDW. It's a great route to ride socially and at race pace.

For those who think map reading can ruin the ride a free GPS trail is available here. http://activefuel.co.uk/index.php?cPath=51
Posted: 18/06/2007 21:02

Talkback: 22 hours to beat

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