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Russ Mantle set to become first British cyclist to hit 1 million miles in the saddle

82-year-old from Hampshire has been recording his mileage for almost seven decades - and still rides 8,000 miles a year

A cyclist from Aldershot will tomorrow become the first person in the UK to have clocked up 1 million miles on a bicycle during almost seven decades of riding.

Russ Mantle, aged 82, will hit the landmark by riding just four miles from his home to the Canal Café in Mytchett, Surrey.

The lifetime Cycling UK member, who completed his apprenticeship as a carpenter after finishing his national service, said: “I haven’t really been going for it, the miles have just naturally piled up because I enjoy cycling so much that’s it’s just natural to be a mile-eater.

“Even when I was in my 60s and 70s, I was doing my highest mileages, so it just shows you that as you get older you don’t necessarily have to do less."

He now averages 14,000 miles a year and added: “In 1989, when I was up to near enough 400,000 miles, I realised that yes eventually I was going to reach the million.”

He has had to rein in his annual mileage due to age but is still on track to hit 8,000 miles this year –  which he admits will be his lowest ever annual total.

Cycling UK chief executive Paul Tuohy said: "Cycling a million miles is not only incredible it's almost incomprehensible. Russ never set out to break any records, cycling is simply a part of his life.

“Cycling UK's mission is to get a million more people out on their bikes, it's amazing that we're celebrating one man's achievement of cycling a million miles in his lifetime.

“Russ is an inspiration and he shows us all what is possible."

The octogenarian – nicknamed Mile-eater Mantle’ – was featured in the April-June 2016 edition of The West Surrey Cyclist, the magazine of West Surrey CTC.

The article, found on page 17, said that at coffee stops Mantle would “stand out because he looks nothing like the usual lycra-clad cyclist.

“In winter he’ll be wearing not a helmet but a woollen hat, a well-worn gabardine jacket, ordinary black trousers with trouser clips and a pair of normal walking shoes. In summer he’ll be in a cotton shirt, a pair of long shorts and the same walking shoes.

“His bike outside is a large-framed, steel Holdsworth of 1970’s vintage with an ancient Carradice saddlebag topped by a rolled-up cycling cape of some vintage.

“He might then join the slower group for a mile or so but, at the first junction, he’s likely to turn off on his own or start walking up the first steep hill.

“But don’t be deceived by appearances. In earlier days even the hard cyclists would have to fight to keep up with him and he’d stroke up many Surrey hills in top gear.

“This man is a cycling legend whose achievements as a former racing cyclist and cycle-tourist are on a scale that none of us is ever likely to remotely approach.”

The winner of 28 open time trial events between 1953 and 1973, Mantle has lived in his parents’ former house since 1949, and going by the article it is something of a shrine to cycling.

With his father serving in the Royal Engineers, Mantle would often move house and school while growing up, which helped him develop a sense of independence and self-reliance.

Most of his riding, naturally, has been undertaken in the UK – including cycling to and from football matches as far afield from Aldershot as the Midlands – but regular trips abroad have also seen him conquer the climbs that feature in the Tour de France and Giro d’Italia.

Over the years, he has suffered a number of serious injuries, including one when he was hit by a lorry and spent three days unconscious in hospital.

In 1985, the frame of his Holdsworth bike was snapped in two. He repaired the broken seatpost himself, using araldite, an old seat post and some sheet aluminium and 30 years on was still riding it.

Mantle is a member of the 300,000 Mile Club, which lists on its website UK cyclists who have passed that benchmark.

His mileage on the website is given as 993,156 miles and tops the list by almost 200,000 miles from George Berwick.

In all, the website lists 58 people still active who have surpassed 300,000 miles while a roll of honour commemorates a further 103 who have done so but have now passed away.

The latter list is topped by Chris Davies on 916,761 miles, while in second place is Pat Kenny at 909,654 miles.

Kenny was killed by a driver who failed to see the 72-year-old as he rode his bike on the A38 near Burton-on-Trent in 2011.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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14 comments

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mdavidford | 4 years ago
1 like

To say someone else may have done it isn't presuming anything - only saying that we can't know.

To say no-one else has done it is presumption with no evidence; saying he is the first is precisely using absence of evidence as evidence.

All we can really say is he's the first known to have recorded such an impressive feat.

Avatar
Philh68 | 4 years ago
2 likes

You can’t use absence of evidence as evidence. You can say he’s the first to do it because it is recorded, to say someone else may have done it is presumption with no evidence.

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mdavidford | 4 years ago
0 likes

I don't doubt that he has racked up his million miles, and even if it's a percent or two out it's still an impressive accumulation. However, I do wonder how we can know that he's the first, and that A.N.Other cyclist(s) haven't hit the mark, but just never bothered logging all their miles. It might have been more accurate to say he's the first British cyclist to record a million miles.

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Bikeylikey | 5 years ago
0 likes

Sorry to be a party pooper here, but I read the whole of the article above wating for how the mileage had been ascertained and proven - nothing!  As Eddie Berckx implies, if it's not recorded and verified somewhere, somehow (even if it's only St**va), how can anyone, including Mr. Mantle, know the actual mileage with any accuracy?

Yes I know, miserable old git. sorry.

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growingvegtables replied to Bikeylikey | 5 years ago
3 likes

bikeylikey wrote:

... miserable old git.

Got it ... in one.

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mike the bike replied to Bikeylikey | 5 years ago
4 likes

bikeylikey wrote:

......  how can anyone, including Mr. Mantle, know the actual mileage with any accuracy?

Yes I know, miserable old git. sorry.

 

It may indeed be true that his recorded mileages are not accurate to a decimal place but you must remember that in 1950 such things were not possible for the everyday cyclist.  I don't know Mr Mantle, but I have met many people of his character and I'm quite happy to accept his truthfulness and his methodology.  And if he's a few miles out, it's as likely to be an underestimate as over.

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crazy-legs replied to Bikeylikey | 5 years ago
4 likes

bikeylikey wrote:

Sorry to be a party pooper here, but I read the whole of the article above wating for how the mileage had been ascertained and proven - nothing!  As Eddie Berckx implies, if it's not recorded and verified somewhere, somehow (even if it's only St**va), how can anyone, including Mr. Mantle, know the actual mileage with any accuracy?

Yes I know, miserable old git. sorry.

Distance records go back to the early 1910's - the long-held record of furthest mileage in a year (Tommy Godwin, 1939, just over 75,000 miles which stood until about 2015) was "verified" using sealed milometers and the equivalent of brevet cards signed by policemen or post offices (who were regarded as upstanding members of the community and unlikely to lie about such things).

Pre-Strava, I've got years of records of rides & races (road, MTB, CX) and they're all as accurate as the computer recording them, there's no "inflation" in there. It might be out by a % or two here or there - moreso on events like Three Peaks CX where there's significant carrying and a traditional cycling computer running a magnet off a spoke won't read - but on normal rides it's fine.

It would be a pretty elaborate deception if he'd lied about his riding over the last 50 years with a view to one day claiming 1 million miles! His clubmates all seem to account for him, he's got a palmares over many years to back it up, it's not like he's suddenly stuck his head above the parapet and no-one has heard of him.

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Shouldbeinbed | 5 years ago
1 like

Hats off and wishing him many more happy miles ridden.

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Yorky-M | 5 years ago
1 like

A life well spent

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Boatsie | 5 years ago
2 likes

I like your bike. Drop tube shifters rock dude.
Congratulations sir

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Global Nomad | 5 years ago
6 likes

a good reminder to all of us, that it is the cycling that matters not the kit/tech/clothes/strava/data etc

Mega Kudos

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alchemilla | 5 years ago
0 likes

Amazing mileage, well done sir!
So far as I know, Chris Davies is still alive and is on the wrong list.

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EddyBerckx | 5 years ago
0 likes

Just wow...gigantic kudos to this legend!!!

 

But I'm gonna be the first to say...if it aint on Str**a...  (in truth, that milage would probably break strava)

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portec | 5 years ago
10 likes

A truly impressive achievement. Chapeau sir!

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