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On 13 March 1940 Pat Hawkins set the 'World 1,000 mile record' in Perth, having ridden the 1,000 miles (1,600 km) distance in 4 days, 8 hours and 7 minutes, cutting 9 hours 53 minutes off Vera Unthank's record. [74] Men's record: Gethin Butler, 2001.
Retrieved 5 October 2021. ^ Shane Stokes (8 October 2022). "Filippo Ganna smashes UCI Hour Record with 56.792km, beats Boardman's Superman mark". velonews.com. Retrieved 10 October 2022. ^ a b "Cycling Track – Women's Sprint – Qualifying – Results" (PDF). olympics.com. COJOP2024. 9 August 2024. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
Hubert Opperman. Sir Hubert Ferdinand Opperman, OBE (29 May 1904 – 18 April 1996), referred to as Oppy by Australian and French crowds, was an Australian cyclist and politician, whose endurance cycling feats in the 1920s and 1930s earned him international acclaim. Hubert rode a bicycle from the age of eight until his 90th birthday, when his ...
She has been placed in other events, including 10-mile races, 12 and 24-hour events, [8] and in 2019, she won gold in the women's pursuit (age 45–54) team at the World Masters Track Cycling Championships. [9] Her personal best for distance covered in 24 hours is 459 miles (739 km). [10] Biddulph works in a bicycle shop in Cannock ...
Dick Poole was a talented time-triallist—a competitor against the clock over fixed distances—living in west London. He was a member of Middlesex Road Club. A meeting with another enthusiast, a model-maker and weekend cycling journalist called Bernard Thompson, led to a plan in 1965 to try for the longest place-to-place record in Britain: Land's End to John o' Groats.
2024 Olympic Games. Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France. [4] 4000 m individual pursuit. (progression) 4:14.982. Lasse Norman Hansen. Denmark. 14 August 2016.
1st N.S.W 1000 1 mile Sprint Championship 1950 – 51 ... Broke 1000 Sprint records – Denmark ... for his service to cycling particularly as a coach and a former ...
From 2 April to 16 July 1984 Jay Aldous and Matt DeWaal rode 22,997 km/14,290 miles in 106 days, riding a greater distance in a shorter time than Nick Sanders in 1981. Aldous and DeWaal started and ended in Salt Lake City, US, and traveled in an easterly direction passing through 15 different countries. Matt DeWaal.