Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

82-Year-Old Celebrates Milestone After Making History By Cycling One Million Miles

82-Year-Old Celebrates Milestone After Making History By Cycling One Million Miles
Russ Mantle from Aldershot cycles through finishing tape at the Canal Cafe in Mytchett, Surrey, England (Andrew Matthews/PA)

An 82-year-old man who has become the first person in the UK to cycle a million miles has declared he has a million miles yet to go before he dies.


Russ Mantle has kept meticulous log books of every ride he has completed in the past 68 years, completing an average of 14,700 miles a year.

The former carpenter and joiner, from Aldershot, Hampshire, England, completed his millionth mile to the cheers of well-wishers at the Canal Cafe at Mytchett.

Russ Mantle celebrates (Andrew Matthews/PA)

Mantle, a Cycling UK life member who started cycling in 1951, said: “One million – I feel the same as usual.

“It's just another milestone, I went through 700,000, then 800,000 and so on, it's another milestone to pass a million to go on to 1.1, 1.2, and so on, I will probably finish up very close to two million by the time I die when I am 100."

He added: “It was just natural progress, I knew I would get there one day."

Describing his love for cycling, he said: “It's just the sheer mobility of it, the convenience of a bike, when I go shopping I can park it right next to the entrance door, no walking, meet clubs, make friends on the bike, it's always been natural to me to do it on a bike.

“From the early Eighties onwards, I was always on my own, get on a plane up into the mountains. It was nothing for me to spend all day up in the mountains, I just love high places."

Russ Mantle cycling in his younger years (Family handout/PA)

Explaining why he does not wear a helmet, Mantle said he cannot put it in his pocket, and added: “Even though I have been unconscious for four of my serious accidents, I still won't wear a helmet, I must have a hard head I suppose, I can still remember things clearly, all those accidents haven't affected my memory.

“I always bounce back as if it hadn't happened. The most serious one was probably when I was knocked unconscious for three days in Southampton hospital by a lorry that smashed my arm in two places but I have got full movement."

When asked what the future holds for him, Mantle, who has cycled in America, Canada and mainland Europe, replied: “Miles, miles, miles."

Mantle has kept paper diaries detailing all of his mileage since 1952, as well as the results of his many race wins during his time competing in time trial races between 1953 and 1975 when he set numerous records.

Celebrations at the finish in Mytchett, Surrey (Andrew Matthews/PA)

After retiring from racing, Mantle led rides for the West Surrey CTC for 20 years and is still a member of several cycling groups.

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

Mantle's milestone is the equivalent of traveling to the moon and back twice or circumnavigating the Earth 40 times.

More from News

Dylan Efron
Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images

'Traitors' Star Dylan Efron Reveals How He Saved Two Women From Drowning In Miami

Dylan Efron of The Traitors season 3 recently shared a dramatic and heroic moment from a trip to Miami’s South Beach, where he stepped in to help beachgoers in distress.

Efron recounted the experience on a recent episode of Brooke and Connor Make a Podcast, explaining that it was his first visit to South Beach.

Keep Reading Show less
Amal and George Clooney
Gilbert Carrasquillo/GC Images

George Clooney Sparks Debate With Claim That He And Wife Amal Have Never Had An Argument

George and Amal Clooney continue to defy the odds with a marriage that remains, by George’s account, argument-free.

During an appearance on CBS Mornings to promote his Broadway debut in Good Night, and Good Luck, the 63-year-old actor and director reflected on life with Amal, 46, whom he married in 2014.

Keep Reading Show less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images

RFK Jr. Sparks Outrage After Announcing 'Disease Registry' To Track Autistic Americans

Republican President Donald Trump's Secretary of Health and Human Services has again sparked fear and outrage among the people he claims to serve. During a press conference on April 14 filled with misinformation and ableist stereotypes, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told the press about his plans to find the "environmental factors" causing a nonexistent autism epidemic.

On Tuesday, CBS News reported the National Institutes of Health (NIH) was creating a national autism registry to track diagnosed Americans as part of a plan to collect patient data without patient consent or knowledge.

Keep Reading Show less
Pedro Pascal
Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Pedro Pascal Supports Trans Women At 'Thunderbolts' Premiere With Iconic T-Shirt

Actor Pedro Pascal has registered his support for trans people in the wake of the UK Supreme Court's decision establishing an anti-trans legal definition of a woman.

Pascal recently attended the UK premiere of Thunderbolts, the new Marvel film, and wore a shirt that had supporters of the LGBTQ+ community cheering.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

White House Ripped After Making Bonkers Earth Day Claim About Trump And 'Science'

President Donald Trump is a pretty well-known science denier so it's perhaps no surprise that the White House was soundly mocked after sharing a press release for Earth Day on Tuesday claiming that "We Finally Have a President Who Follows Science"—which is quite something given so many federal workers from health and science agencies have been fired in recent weeks.

The White House claimed that Trump is "leveraging environmental policies rooted in reality to promote economic growth while maintaining the standards that have afforded Americans the cleanest air and water in the world for generations."

Keep Reading Show less