Going from zero cycling to taking part in a triathlon in the space of two weeks is unimaginable for most of us. Yet, that's exactly what mother-of-three Alison Carrick did when she was unwittingly caught up in a 21km bike race in Helmshore, Lancashire two weekends ago.
The primary school teacher from Haslingden - just two kilometres away from the race start - found herself among 250 dripping wet lycra-clad cyclists riding a route around Lancashire countryside as part of the 11th Rossendale Triathlon.
Though, despite her lack of lycra, riding experience, and racing bike, Mrs Carrick completed the course aboard her trusty second hand hybrid.
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In an interview with the Mirror she said that she "didn't have a clue what was happening at the start."
Though, upon realising that she'd somehow found herself in the midsts of a triathlon, she reportedly thought "'Oh my goodness, what does this mean for me?'" Adding that she "just didn't realise we were taking the same route.
"I should have stopped and made my way back but I just felt like I had to keep going.
"I kept thinking it can’t be that much further. I don’t think I realised how far the cycling part of it actually was."
Despite those early fears and upon completing the 21-kilometre route, she said that "the experience was amazing, people were all cheering me on.
“I wasn’t pretending to be part of it," she added. "I didn’t have any of the right gear but people were encouraging me to keep going when I got off and pushed the bike. The stewards kept directing me where to go.
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“At the time I felt like I should have a basket on the front with a baguette in it, I was going that slow."
It was the cheers, and a set of stewards with a clear sense of humour, that were the catalyst for Ms Carrick's bizarre but brilliant achievement. In her own words she was far from prepared, yet her achievement should be a signal to all of us that we're much more capable than we perhaps think we are.
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"I was hardly up for a triathlon," she said. "But I got caught up exactly the moment they started. It felt like I couldn’t get off it.
“I have only been cycling for a fortnight so my fitness levels are not great.
“Once you get caught up in something like that you can’t stop. I have not cycled for a long, long time, I’d only thought I was going to do five or six miles. Now I know I can do 18."
Event organiser Graeme Courtney was dumfounded when he found out. He believes Mrs Carrick was the first non-competitor to ever take part in the Rossendale Triathlon and encouraged her to take part properly next year.
“She’s got a year’s worth of training to get ready for next year’s race,” he said.
“It’s brilliant that she managed to do it, and we’re always looking for new members at the club."
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When asked what's next for her cycling career, Mrs Carrick was coy at first:
“I have not been able to get back on the bike since because my legs are like jelly," she said. "But now I want to be somewhere near as fit as some of those cyclists that shot past me.”
If you are in a similar situation to Mrs Carrick, in that you've just started cycling again, or you know someone who has just started, dotted throughout this article are links to a variety of our guides for new cyclists.
Whether you need help deciding on the right bike, the right clothes, or the tools to buy, we can help you.
If you've got any more questions, feel free to ask away in the comment section.
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24 comments
[[[[[ No, not confused, "eddyhall". What is a "real cyclist"? Perhaps it's someone who enjoys cycling, and chooses to ride when other travel options are available. Ergo, not those folk who use a bike (reluctantly) to avoid the cost of public--or any-- motorised transport.
Excellent! Go Missus!
was she subsequently dq'd for not wearing her helmet back to front?
Brilliant and good on her!
At Swansea Tri last week one of the competitors actually did have a basket on the front of her bike. No baguette though, which is a shame as I needed a snack.
I was on a 30 odd mile Rough Stuff Fellowship ride a couple of years ago which started from the same place as 10+ mile Sky ride. Just as we were finishing this guy who we thought was a prospective new member and who looked a bit whacked said to me " bl**dy hell that was a hard 10 miles!"
I see the title has been changed to "novice cyclist" now, and rightly so. What a lovely story!
We've all had days where we've felt we should have a basket and baguette on our bike lol. Good on her.
This is the perfect quote to show anyone who thinks cycling any distance is insurmountable:
So was it 21km or was it 18 miles?
The triathlon course was 21km (~13 miles) plus the bit she did from her home to where she ended up on the course, and the same again in reverse would presumably take it to 18 miles.
Well done! Lucky it wan't an Ironman distance......
Loved this story. Well done to her!
nice wee story.
Chapeau Alison , that's all I've got to say!
I'm confused, Road.cc - is she a "non-cyclist" or is she a "cyclist of two weeks"? Is she not a cyclist because she was not dressed in lycra? Or because she was riding a second-hand hybrid?
I hardly ever complain about elitism in cycling but the article title seems a bit unfair & tabloid-ish.
Firstly, "Chapeau! Alison".
Even the tabloid carrying the story refered to her as a cyclist - a novice cyclist, but still a cyclist.
The editorial team seem to have taken the definition of a "proper cyclist" as being a card carrying BC member as spouted by one of the pros (Wiggins, Froome?) a while back.
Ah that's class!
Wasn't there an article a few weeks ago about a guy who covertly joined a race to help his mate?
Is this any different?
Yes.
Completely different he was helping his team mates. She's just having fun.
Yeah, I can appreciate that. I'm more curious as to whether you are allowed to just join in like this.
I don't think that one really should just join in like she did, but they can't stop you from using the open road I guess. Furthermore the fact that she was being cheered on and encouraged by stewards means that it's probably fine that even if there is a rule that you can't just join in means that an exception should be made in this case!
Someone joining a race as a calculated move to help his mates out and a bystander getting caught up in proceedings are completely different circumstances too.
My regular route in the Ashley/Mobberley/Wilmslow area has an event of some sort using it every 2 weeks or so during the summer.
Unless I stay at home it's impossible not to 'join in'.