For most people, the Great Knaresborough Bed Race is all about fun and supporting good causes.
But for some, it’s also a highly competitive 2.4-mile mad dash across town and river while pushing a bed.
The elite teams train hard for the glory of arriving back at Conyngham House first and it’s doubtful whether anyone has had more success in the event’s 57-year history than Chris Miller, 41, who led the GH Brooks team to victory in 13 minutes and five seconds last week.
It was Chris’ 12th success in the race since he first took part in 2003, making him the Novak Djokovic of the bed race. He chalked up nine wins with Harrogate Harriers before having a break and landing three more with GH Brooks.

The GH Brooks team leading with Chris (left)
The GH Brooks team is on a four-race winning streak. Its reserve team even managed third, with Ripon Runners second in the men’s race and first in the women’s.
GH Brooks is a builders’ merchants in Harrogate and although the name conjures up images of guys in high vis jackets with jeans hanging down their backsides beating a load of runners, the truth is more prosaic.
They are the Harlem Globetrotters of the bed race — local running superstars hand-picked for the event thanks to the support of GH Brooks owner Andy Broadwith. Chris confesses:
“We are a team of ringers. We are all mates who race for local clubs.”
Chris represents Wharfedale Harriers, others run for Harrogate Harriers and Leeds City Athletic Club. But nothing on the track or fell compares with the bedlam of bed race, where tens of thousands of people line the midsummer streets.

Running for Wharfedale
He says:
“It’s just mad. When you come by the World’s End pub you are just hit by this wall of noise.”
Elite local runners are queueing up to be part of the GH Brooks success story but Chris, who by day is a scientist, is understandably reluctant to break up a winning team. John Young, with six race wins, is another major part of the success.
Don’t even think of applying if you can’t manage a five-minute mile — and not many can. To maintain that pace while pushing a bed up winding, undulating streets and swimming across the Nidd is extraordinary.
“You have to be a competitive standard because you’re only as fast as your slowest runner. You’ve got to be prepared to be hurt and then hurt again.
“Experience helps but it’s down to having six runners who are all of a similar standard.”
This year’s time was six seconds slower than last year, when GH Brooks became the first to dip below 13 minutes.
But Chris says it was the “hottest and hardest” bed race he’s done.

Winning with Harrogate Harriers
How long will he continue? A couple of years, he says, but admits bed race is addictive. He will send out the call after Christmas to see who wants to enter and doesn’t expect many refusals. He says:
“People say afterwards ‘I think this will be my last one’ but when it rolls round they want to do it again. There’s nothing like it.”
Read more:
- Gallery: Huge crowds bask in sun at Knaresborough bed race
- How the wheels came off Knaresborough’s bid to win bed race