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Sara Cox ‘unable to walk’ after gruelling Children In Need marathon

For use in UK, Ireland or Benelux countries only BBC handout photo of Sara Cox receiving a message from the Prince of Wales during her Children In Need challenge to cover 135 miles in five days. Prince William has congratulated the BBC Radio 2 presenter for her challenge, which has raised more than ?4 million. Cox, who presents Radio 2's Teatime Show on weekdays, will end her Great Northern Marathon Challenge on Friday, covering the equivalent of five marathons in five days. Picture date: Friday November 14, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: BBC/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: Not for use more than 21 days after issue. You may use this picture without charge only for the purpose of publicising or reporting on current BBC programming, personnel or other BBC output or activity within 21 days of issue. Any use after that time MUST be cleared through BBC Picture Publicity. Please credit the image to the BBC and any named photographer or independent programme maker, as described in the caption.
Sara Cox has revealed her recovery from her Children In Need challenge has been more brutal than expected (Picture: BBC/PA Wire)

Sara Cox has revealed she’s now barely able to walk after completing her epic 135-mile Children In Need challenge, with the fundraising total surging to an incredible £10 million.

The BBC Radio 2 presenter, 50, finished her Great Northern Marathon Challenge last week after trekking from the Scottish border to Pudsey in Leeds over five punishing days, effectively running five marathons in five days.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast today, she admitted she’d massively overestimated how quickly she’d bounce back, joking that she’d expected to spend the weekend taking the dogs for a ‘gentle walk.’

Instead, she confessed: ‘I can’t really walk! I had to put the Crocs on, and even that was a squeeze. I had to really wrestle my Crocs on because my feet have a lot of fluid on them.’

She compared the post-challenge exhaustion to the wiped-out feeling at the end of a bad flu, saying she currently feels completely drained.

Sara’s ordeal has been matched only by the extraordinary public support she’s received.

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During the challenge, she broke down in tears mid-week after learning she’d already raised over £1million. By the time she crossed the finish line around 3.30pm on Friday, supporters had donated £7.6 million, with the total now soaring beyond £10 million.

‘Our £10 million is the fivers, tenners, and twenties of Radio 2 listeners and Children In Need supporters who have each individually given their hard-earned cash,’ she said. ‘It means the absolute world.’

Moments after finishing the challenge last week, Sara told co-host Scott Mills that the entire endeavour had been a ‘really silly idea,’ laughing despite looking utterly spent.

I was hugely emotional (Picture: BBC/PA Wire)
Sara was elated after finishing the long trek (Picture: BBC/Sarah Louise Bennett)

She called it ‘the hardest thing I’ve ever done’ and admitted: ‘I’ve never known pain like it. It was bitterly cold and wet and filthy.’

She added that her legs look like she’s ‘been hit with a bat all along my shins,’ describing the swelling, bruising, and fluid build-up as ‘hideous.’

Despite the agony, Sara said the public kept her going: truck drivers honking their horns, farmers stopping work to say hello, children cheering from the roadside, and families offering their homes when she needed a toilet break.

For now, though, she’s sticking to Crocs and rest — and leaving the dog walks behind for a while.

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