Alex McCormack rides 3,826 km in seven days to smash world record
Ultra-endurance records enter the territory of the superhuman
Nature doesn't care about your training plan. When you step into the arena of ultra-endurance, the mountains and the elements demand everything you've got and then some. British rider
The sheer brutality of the logistics is enough to make a seasoned mountain athlete pause. McCormack averaged 18.5 hours a day in the saddle, burning approximately 14,000 calories every 24 hours. The mental toughness required to sustain 546 kilometers per day—capped by a final, desperate push of 727 kilometers—is almost incomprehensible. This isn't just cycling; it's a war of attrition against the body's fundamental need for rest and homeostasis.
The dangerous cost of sleep deprivation in the wild

There is a point where the pursuit of a record crosses from extreme sport into genuine peril. One of the most harrowing statistics from McCormack’s ride was his final 40-hour push, during which he reportedly slept for only one hour. When you are operating on that level of sleep deprivation, the brain begins to fracture. Decisions become sluggish, and the line between reality and exhaustion-induced haze blurs. McCormack himself admitted that in his usual unsupported bike-packing races, he would have been forced to stop for safety reasons.
However, this attempt was supported by a dedicated crew and a medical doctor. This shift toward "professionalized" ultra-endurance—where a team manages the athlete's safety and nutrition—allows riders to push much further than they ever could solo. But it also raises a controversial question: should we be cheering for athletes to bypass their survival instincts? While the achievement is monumental, the risks of hallucination, physical collapse, and long-term neurological strain are real. As boundaries are pushed further, the margin for error disappears entirely.
Paul Seixas and the new generation of World Tour dominance
While the ultra-distance world tests the limits of time, the
We are witnessing an era where the "next big thing" seems to arrive every six months, but Seixas looks like the genuine article. The gap he created in a short, technical opening stage suggests a level of aerobic efficiency that usually takes a decade to cultivate. The cycling world is already speculating whether he is the only rider capable of eventually challenging the absolute dominance of
The controversial evolution of 32-inch wheels and technical gravel
In the world of gear, the push for efficiency often leads back to the fundamentals of rolling resistance and stability. The "32-inch wheel debate" is resurfacing, particularly for taller riders who feel the standard 700c wheel is a compromise in geometry and handling. Custom builders like
This trend coincides with the evolution of digital training. Even
Safety concerns in the age of extreme progression
The drive to keep viewers engaged is pushing adventure sports toward a dangerous precipice. Parallels are being drawn between the current state of ultra-cycling and the world of freeride mountain biking, specifically events like
In ultra-endurance, the danger isn't necessarily a 40-foot drop, but rather the failure of the heart or the loss of motor control while descending a mountain pass at 70 km/h after days without sleep. As athletes like