Former top triathlete Lucy Gossage was one THE stories of the Winter Spine Race last year.
On what was her debut in the event, Gossage finished third behind defending champion Claire Bannwarth and previous podium finisher Hannah Rickman in what is dubbed โBritainโs most brutalโ ultrarunning event โ 268 miles up the Pennine Way from Edale in the Peak District to Kirk Yetholm on the English-Scottish border.
The NHS oncologist was fundraising for MOVE, which aims to โuse physical activity and exercise to improve the lives of people with cancerโ, and raised well over ยฃ30,000 for the charity.
But rather than a joyous celebration of her achievements afterwards, there was instead a shocking development which she has now spoken about in detail ahead of her return to this yearโs event which starts this Sunday (12th January).
Post-race bombshell
As she told us ahead of the race last year, all the training for the Spine had been done with her partner Andrew, who also took part in the race.
But in Gossageโs own words events took a completely unexpected turn during and after the event. In a blog post published a week before this yearโs start and titled โThe Spine Take 2. A race for closureโ, she explained: โ24 hours into last yearโs race, my friend Nikki, who had been sharing my and my partnerโs progress through the race on socials, capturing the imagination of so many of you through her storytelling, received a message from a woman claiming she had been dating my partner of over 3 years, without knowing about me, for the prior few months.
โNikkiโs first instinct was not to believe it. She, as did many others of our friends, were expecting us to get engaged after the Spine. But after exchanging messages with this brave woman, it became clear this wasnโt some cruel hoax. It was true.โ
Gossage writes in detail about the impact of that betrayal โ and why she is openly sharing the experience to try and help others who might find themselves in a similar situation โ click here for the full post.
โSuccess will be drawing a line under the chaosโ
But now 12 months on, she returns to the event and itโs clear her hopes and motivations for taking part again are multi-layered.
She will start as one of the favourites. Bannwarth, emphatic winner for the last two years, swerves a hat-trick bid and instead races in the Hong Kong 100 a week later.
But thoughts of winning donโt appear a priority right now for Gossage. She says: โFor now, this story is why I find myself on the start line for this bonkers race in just a few daysโ time. Last yearโs Spine race was about working towards something together with someone I loved. It was about 3 years of adventuring together to finish something utterly crazy. But as it turned out, I had just 5 days to celebrate this joint achievement before my world came crashing down. This year, I want the time to savour this sense of satisfaction for myself.

โYesterday a friend asked me what I thought I would view as โsuccessโ at this yearโs race.
โYes, Iโd like to find the sleep jigsaw piece that I didnโt find last year. Yes, Iโd like to put together a more sensible race so that I finish the race moving with purpose across the Cheviots rather than stumbling over them as a blithering, incoherent mess.
โBut more than anything, success will be drawing a line under the chaos of the last year and reclaiming my memories of the Spine for myself.
โSuccess will be shuffling down the hill to the finish feeling pride that Iโve survived 2024 and have found it within me to tackle the Spine again, for myself.
Success will be celebrating resilience, and the new friends Iโve made along the way.
โWhen I think back to my words before the race last year โThe journey to the start has been life-changing. I have no doubt the race will be life-changingโ, I realize how true they were. Last yearโs race changed my life in ways I never expected. Iโm sure this yearโs race will too.
โBut this time, I hope it will be about finding closure and finding myself again.โ