Daily Mirror

Former Leeds prop Dowes is joining 25 others to break a static cycling world record to help his pal Burrow... and his old coach Doddie Weir

- BY GARETH WALKER Rugby Lge Correspond­ent @garethwalk­er

EWAN DOWES has more reason than most to push his body to its limits this weekend to raise funds for the Motor Neurone Disease Associatio­n. cycling events were cancelled this summer, Dowes (below) had no hesitation.

He explained: “I remember meeting Joost van der Westhuizen when I was about 18 years old in South Africa and it was so sad and shocking to see how he deteriorat­ed.

“Doddie Weir coached me a bit when I was a young lad, there was Adam passing away in February and Rob getting his diagnosis at the back end of last year.

“It’s frightenin­g and close to all our hearts, and we all want to do our bit for Rob.

“We want to generate some awareness of the disease, and raise some funds to ultimately help find a cure for it. When I looked into it further I couldn’t believe how little informatio­n or treatment there still is for it.

“I do a lot of work with the Joining Jack charity for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, which is another horrible degenerati­ve disease. The clock is ticking for everybody that suffers and the sooner we have a breakthrou­gh or slow them down, the better.” Dowes’ support for Joining Jack – the charity set up by former Wigan player Andy Johnson and his wife Alex to help their son – saw him take on a similar test of endurance last month. Dowes, Paul

Sculthorpe and Jamie JonesBucha­nan completed 26 hours on watt bikes as their take on the 2.6 challenge – and he will go even further to set a group world record.

He explained: “I’ve been saying to everyone that’s doing it, you can’t train for sitting on a bike for that long.

“You’re going to go through some pain and it’s a mental battle more than anything. If you can get through that then you’re going to complete it.”

But the competitiv­e nature of former Super League players remains, and talk of trying to cover one million metres has been raised.

Dowes, who also chairs the Yorkshire region of the St James’s Place Charitable Foundation, added: “We did 806,000 metres in the last one so we’ve spoken about that and had a look a the maths and it is achievable.

“Everybody involved is super competitiv­e.”

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