Bradley Wiggins vs Andy Birdsall part two: Wiggo's minute man battles world champion

Andy Birdsall (Tickhill Velo) surpasses his expectations to hold off Sir Bradley Wiggins for longer than he expected a the City RC 10 mile time trial

Andy Birdsall and Bradley Wiggins

Andy Birdsall and Bradley Wiggins

(Image credit: Andy Birdsall)

Sir Bradley Wiggins’ minute man Andy Birdsall managed to stand up to the time trial world champion for over four minutes at the City RC 10 mile event this Saturday.

With a roaring tailwind on the first four miles of the course, the Tickhill Velo rider surpassed his own expectations for how long he would be able to prolong the inevitable and stayed ahead of the rainbow stripes for four minutes and 20 seconds, setting a personal best of 24-52 in the process.

Birdsall's club had run a competition on social media to promote their YESSS Tickhill Grand Prix, inviting followers on Twitter to guess how long their man would last using #ANDYvsWIGGO.

“I got further than I thought, before he passed me, so I can’t complain about that,” Birdsall told Cycling Weekly after a bite of cake and a bottle of water at the finish in Newport, near Hull.

“I couldn’t hear him coming, because I had my helmet on. I just saw him out of the corner of my eye. Someone said to me before to try to catch his wheel, but I couldn’t have caught that with a lasso!”

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The strong northwesterly wind toppled Wiggins’ hopes of breaking the competition record for 10 miles, turning from a tailwind into a gusty headwind on the final five miles and leaving Alex Dowsett’s mark of 17-20 intact.

That wind also delayed the start of the event by 45 minutes after a wobbly lamppost, which had been driven into by a car on Friday night, was deemed unsafe by the Highways Agency and was removed from the roadside.

It didn’t make much of a difference for Wiggins – the wind neither died down nor increased as the afternoon wore on – but it did mean that the sheet of finishing times, the tables of cakes and the tea urn had to be moved to a sideroom at the Newport village hall to make way for a pre-booked children’s party.

It also made for soaring speeds in the first section of the course, which began with a smooth downhill sliproad onto the A63 dual carriageway.

“I think I was doing 38 mph and he [Wiggins] came past me as if I was stood still,” added Birdsall. “He must have been doing 45, maybe even nearly 50, miles an hour.”

Wiggins declined to sign on at the start in Newport (leaving the job to his director sportif Simon Cope while he warmed up in the empty car park of a nearby hotel) but rode off the dual carriageway after the race, chatting with a small bunch of competitors – including his seven minute man, who he overtook - before jumping into a team car, returning to the hotel for a shower and then over to the HQ to sign autographs and pose for photos.

Andy Birdsall and Bradley Wiggins

Andy Birdsall and Sir Bradley Wiggins following the City RC 10
(Image credit: Andy Birdsall)

It wasn't just about Wiggins though; Birdsall says he was well recognised by the hundreds of fans lining the lay-bys and bridges along the A63, including around 30 supporters in the bright pink kit of Tickhill Velo themselves.

“I don’t know how many people were there, but there were a lot of people on the bridges shouting me on, and they actually knew my name!” he said. “I didn’t look up with my head, just with my eyes!”

Andy Birdsall Tickhill Velo

Andy Birdsall with his Tickhill Velo club mates after his ride
(Image credit: Andy Jones)

“I didn’t feel any pressure beforehand, even on the startline, but it was a bit of relief that when he [Wiggins] passed me so I could just carry on with my own plan to keep pedalling as fast as I could.

“I got 6.1 miles and I felt sick, but I thought that’s not going to be a good picture, so I pushed on through that. My computer died several times, I lost signal so I didn’t know what speed I was going at. But from my heart and my brain I could tell I was going as fast as I could!”

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Richard Abraham is an award-winning writer, based in New Zealand. He has reported from major sporting events including the Tour de France and Olympic Games, and is also a part-time travel guide who has delivered luxury cycle tours and events across Europe. In 2019 he was awarded Writer of the Year at the PPA Awards.