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‘At the half-way point, I was four minutes behind’ – Unbound Gravel winner Cameron Jones surpasses Keegan Swenson’s record time at The White Rim
By
Jackie Tyson
published
New Zealander sets new FKT on 100-mile, rugged Utah route by making up deficit and trimming nearly five minutes from US rider’s mark

(Image credit: Life Time)
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Cameron Jones (Scott Sports USA-RCC) set a new fastest known time, FKT, on The White Rim trail in Utah on Tuesday, knocking 4 minutes, 54 seconds off the previous record held by Keegan Swenson (Specialized Off-road) since 2021.
The clocked stopped at 5:23:27 for Jones on the unsupported FKT ride recorded on Strava and confirmed by Scott Sports USA.
“It’s about five minutes of it [the record]? It’s a hard thing to race around. The bike was so good,” Jones said to the Scott Sports USA videographer at the finish.
Article continues below
The 100-mile (160.70km) challenge with 7,414 feet (2,260 metres) of elevation gain is set across remote desert terrain outside Moab, Utah, with much of the route passing through Canyonlands National Park. For an FKT, whether unsupported or supported, riders proceed in a counter-clockwise direction, the start where Mineral Bottom Road intersects with Island in the Sky Road.
Skies were clear for Jones’ attempt but the wind became an issue. A headwind in the first half of the loop saw him trailing Swenson’s record by almost four minutes at the half-way point.
“It was quite windy in my ride. I had timing written down on my top tube handle. At the timing split, I knew what time Keegan got past that distance at, and so I could keep track of how I was progressing. And at the halfway point, I was four minutes behind, even after pushing quite hard,” he told Cyclingnews on Thursday.
“But I knew I had to sort of stay optimistic that if I was putting up with the headwind early, then it would then turn into a tailwind eventually. So yeah, it was quite a mental game as well, staying positive and optimistic that it would work out in the end.”
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Prior to the attempt, Jones completed one-hour acclimation rides on each end of the jeep track, checking the terrain as well as the scenery. He said the best recon he did was a call made to women’s FKT record holder Hannah Otto, who lives in Utah and also a fellow Scott Sports athlete. Both compete in the Life Time Grand Prix.
“The night before I made a phone call to Hannah Otto, who is another Scott athlete. She gave a heads up on a section at about the half-way point that was extra technical, and some extra care should be taken. So that was valuable information,” he noted.
“It was a few line choice sections where there was sort of rock shelves and gullies where you could fall into if you went the wrong way.”
He used a full suspension Scott Spark RC frame fitted with drop bars as well as Industry Nine wheels and Schwalbe tyres. Details on the bike check will follow in the coming days from Jones on social media.
Jones became a household name in racing last year when he used the victory at Unbound Gravel 200 to ignite his campaign in the Life Time Grand Prix and secure the overall title in October. He unseated three-time series winner Swenson in the process.
He started this year by winning the first-ever Oceania Gravel Championship for elite men, overcoming a puncture and a fast field to go second at RADL GRVL, which was won by Frenchman Romain Bardet (RCC). After going second in a three-rider sprint at The Mid South in Oklahoma, he traveled to Utah for the FKT.
The route is open for recreational cyclists and most excursions are taken for bikepacking trips, which take three to four days to complete on a mountain bike.
“It’s quite a popular loop for people to do, just as an adventure ride with families. There were lots of family groups out there riding it when I did it.”
US rider Otto completed the loop in 6:37:44 last year. She took just over 15 minutes off the previous women’s mark, which had been held for four years by Grand Prix athlete Alexis Skarda.
The White Rim record gave Otto a trifecta in FKT achievements for western US trails – the 55-mile Whole Enchilada in 2022, 140-mile Kokopelli in 2024, followed by the 100-mile White Rim. All three are considered tests for mountain bike skills and endurance.
“I’ve got a few things I want to do at some point, probably not this year, like spending some time in the area. There’s the other two [FKT routes] near Moab, the Kokopelli and the Whole Enchilada, but no real plans at the moment,” Jones admitted.
“My next race is Sea Otter in two weeks. As one of the Life Time races, it’s super important to perform well. It’s one of the more technical gravel races, so my mountain bike background helps there. I think having been in New Zealand over the summer is an advantage, so I should be in good form.”
The 2026 Life Time Grand Prix series begins at Sea Otter Classic, with the 90-mile pro gravel races held on Thursday, April 16 in Monterey, California.
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Jackie has been involved in professional sports for more than 30 years in news reporting, sports marketing and public relations. She founded Peloton Sports in 1998, a sports marketing and public relations agency, which managed projects for Tour de Georgia, Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah and USA Cycling. She also founded Bike Alpharetta Inc, a Georgia non-profit to promote safe cycling. She is proud to have worked in professional baseball for six years – from selling advertising to pulling the tarp for several minor league teams. On the bike, she has climbed l’Alpe d’Huez three times (not fast), and spends time on gravel around horse farms in north Georgia.
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‘At the half-way point, I was four minutes behind’ – Unbound Gravel winner Cameron Jones surpasses Keegan Swenson’s record time at The White Rim
By
Jackie Tyson
published
New Zealander sets new FKT on 100-mile, rugged Utah route by making up deficit and trimming nearly five minutes from US rider’s mark

(Image credit: Life Time)
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Cameron Jones (Scott Sports USA-RCC) set a new fastest known time, FKT, on The White Rim trail in Utah on Tuesday, knocking 4 minutes, 54 seconds off the previous record held by Keegan Swenson (Specialized Off-road) since 2021.
The clocked stopped at 5:23:27 for Jones on the unsupported FKT ride recorded on Strava and confirmed by Scott Sports USA.
“It’s about five minutes of it [the record]? It’s a hard thing to race around. The bike was so good,” Jones said to the Scott Sports USA videographer at the finish.
Article continues below
The 100-mile (160.70km) challenge with 7,414 feet (2,260 metres) of elevation gain is set across remote desert terrain outside Moab, Utah, with much of the route passing through Canyonlands National Park. For an FKT, whether unsupported or supported, riders proceed in a counter-clockwise direction, the start where Mineral Bottom Road intersects with Island in the Sky Road.
Skies were clear for Jones’ attempt but the wind became an issue. A headwind in the first half of the loop saw him trailing Swenson’s record by almost four minutes at the half-way point.
“It was quite windy in my ride. I had timing written down on my top tube handle. At the timing split, I knew what time Keegan got past that distance at, and so I could keep track of how I was progressing. And at the halfway point, I was four minutes behind, even after pushing quite hard,” he told Cyclingnews on Thursday.
“But I knew I had to sort of stay optimistic that if I was putting up with the headwind early, then it would then turn into a tailwind eventually. So yeah, it was quite a mental game as well, staying positive and optimistic that it would work out in the end.”
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
Prior to the attempt, Jones completed one-hour acclimation rides on each end of the jeep track, checking the terrain as well as the scenery. He said the best recon he did was a call made to women’s FKT record holder Hannah Otto, who lives in Utah and also a fellow Scott Sports athlete. Both compete in the Life Time Grand Prix.
“The night before I made a phone call to Hannah Otto, who is another Scott athlete. She gave a heads up on a section at about the half-way point that was extra technical, and some extra care should be taken. So that was valuable information,” he noted.
“It was a few line choice sections where there was sort of rock shelves and gullies where you could fall into if you went the wrong way.”
He used a full suspension Scott Spark RC frame fitted with drop bars as well as Industry Nine wheels and Schwalbe tyres. Details on the bike check will follow in the coming days from Jones on social media.
Jones became a household name in racing last year when he used the victory at Unbound Gravel 200 to ignite his campaign in the Life Time Grand Prix and secure the overall title in October. He unseated three-time series winner Swenson in the process.
He started this year by winning the first-ever Oceania Gravel Championship for elite men, overcoming a puncture and a fast field to go second at RADL GRVL, which was won by Frenchman Romain Bardet (RCC). After going second in a three-rider sprint at The Mid South in Oklahoma, he traveled to Utah for the FKT.
The route is open for recreational cyclists and most excursions are taken for bikepacking trips, which take three to four days to complete on a mountain bike.
“It’s quite a popular loop for people to do, just as an adventure ride with families. There were lots of family groups out there riding it when I did it.”
US rider Otto completed the loop in 6:37:44 last year. She took just over 15 minutes off the previous women’s mark, which had been held for four years by Grand Prix athlete Alexis Skarda.
The White Rim record gave Otto a trifecta in FKT achievements for western US trails – the 55-mile Whole Enchilada in 2022, 140-mile Kokopelli in 2024, followed by the 100-mile White Rim. All three are considered tests for mountain bike skills and endurance.
“I’ve got a few things I want to do at some point, probably not this year, like spending some time in the area. There’s the other two [FKT routes] near Moab, the Kokopelli and the Whole Enchilada, but no real plans at the moment,” Jones admitted.
“My next race is Sea Otter in two weeks. As one of the Life Time races, it’s super important to perform well. It’s one of the more technical gravel races, so my mountain bike background helps there. I think having been in New Zealand over the summer is an advantage, so I should be in good form.”
The 2026 Life Time Grand Prix series begins at Sea Otter Classic, with the 90-mile pro gravel races held on Thursday, April 16 in Monterey, California.
A post shared by Scott USA (@scottsportsusa)
A photo posted by on

Jackie has been involved in professional sports for more than 30 years in news reporting, sports marketing and public relations. She founded Peloton Sports in 1998, a sports marketing and public relations agency, which managed projects for Tour de Georgia, Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah and USA Cycling. She also founded Bike Alpharetta Inc, a Georgia non-profit to promote safe cycling. She is proud to have worked in professional baseball for six years – from selling advertising to pulling the tarp for several minor league teams. On the bike, she has climbed l’Alpe d’Huez three times (not fast), and spends time on gravel around horse farms in north Georgia.
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Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
-
1‘I deliberately got rid of my social media for two weeks’ – Remco Evenepoel addresses drama of surprise Tour of Flanders debut and says he wouldn’t be starting if victory wasn’t possible -
2What can Evenepoel learn from Pogačar, Nibali, and Valverde? 5 memorable Tour of Flanders debuts from big-name cobbles newbies
-
3A third WorldTour stage race victory in 2026 for Isaac del Toro? Analysing the Itzulia Basque Country contenders
-
4‘At the half-way point, I was four minutes behind’ – Unbound Gravel winner Cameron Jones surpasses Keegan Swenson’s record time at The White Rim
-
5‘He can attack in the most random places’ – Tadej Pogačar ponders potential tactical headache of Remco Evenepoel at Tour of Flanders
‘At the half-way point, I was four minutes behind’ – Unbound Gravel winner Cameron Jones surpasses Keegan Swenson’s record time at The White Rim
By
Jackie Tyson
published
New Zealander sets new FKT on 100-mile, rugged Utah route by making up deficit and trimming nearly five minutes from US rider’s mark
-
Facebook
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X
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Pinterest
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Follow us
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
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Your newsletter sign-up was successful
Cameron Jones (Scott Sports USA-RCC) set a new fastest known time, FKT, on The White Rim trail in Utah on Tuesday, knocking 4 minutes, 54 seconds off the previous record held by Keegan Swenson (Specialized Off-road) since 2021.
The clocked stopped at 5:23:27 for Jones on the unsupported FKT ride recorded on Strava and confirmed by Scott Sports USA.
“It’s about five minutes of it [the record]? It’s a hard thing to race around. The bike was so good,” Jones said to the Scott Sports USA videographer at the finish.
Article continues below
The 100-mile (160.70km) challenge with 7,414 feet (2,260 metres) of elevation gain is set across remote desert terrain outside Moab, Utah, with much of the route passing through Canyonlands National Park. For an FKT, whether unsupported or supported, riders proceed in a counter-clockwise direction, the start where Mineral Bottom Road intersects with Island in the Sky Road.
Skies were clear for Jones’ attempt but the wind became an issue. A headwind in the first half of the loop saw him trailing Swenson’s record by almost four minutes at the half-way point.
“It was quite windy in my ride. I had timing written down on my top tube handle. At the timing split, I knew what time Keegan got past that distance at, and so I could keep track of how I was progressing. And at the halfway point, I was four minutes behind, even after pushing quite hard,” he told Cyclingnews on Thursday.
“But I knew I had to sort of stay optimistic that if I was putting up with the headwind early, then it would then turn into a tailwind eventually. So yeah, it was quite a mental game as well, staying positive and optimistic that it would work out in the end.”
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
Prior to the attempt, Jones completed one-hour acclimation rides on each end of the jeep track, checking the terrain as well as the scenery. He said the best recon he did was a call made to women’s FKT record holder Hannah Otto, who lives in Utah and also a fellow Scott Sports athlete. Both compete in the Life Time Grand Prix.
“The night before I made a phone call to Hannah Otto, who is another Scott athlete. She gave a heads up on a section at about the half-way point that was extra technical, and some extra care should be taken. So that was valuable information,” he noted.
“It was a few line choice sections where there was sort of rock shelves and gullies where you could fall into if you went the wrong way.”
He used a full suspension Scott Spark RC frame fitted with drop bars as well as Industry Nine wheels and Schwalbe tyres. Details on the bike check will follow in the coming days from Jones on social media.
Jones became a household name in racing last year when he used the victory at Unbound Gravel 200 to ignite his campaign in the Life Time Grand Prix and secure the overall title in October. He unseated three-time series winner Swenson in the process.
He started this year by winning the first-ever Oceania Gravel Championship for elite men, overcoming a puncture and a fast field to go second at RADL GRVL, which was won by Frenchman Romain Bardet (RCC). After going second in a three-rider sprint at The Mid South in Oklahoma, he traveled to Utah for the FKT.
The route is open for recreational cyclists and most excursions are taken for bikepacking trips, which take three to four days to complete on a mountain bike.
“It’s quite a popular loop for people to do, just as an adventure ride with families. There were lots of family groups out there riding it when I did it.”
US rider Otto completed the loop in 6:37:44 last year. She took just over 15 minutes off the previous women’s mark, which had been held for four years by Grand Prix athlete Alexis Skarda.
The White Rim record gave Otto a trifecta in FKT achievements for western US trails – the 55-mile Whole Enchilada in 2022, 140-mile Kokopelli in 2024, followed by the 100-mile White Rim. All three are considered tests for mountain bike skills and endurance.
“I’ve got a few things I want to do at some point, probably not this year, like spending some time in the area. There’s the other two [FKT routes] near Moab, the Kokopelli and the Whole Enchilada, but no real plans at the moment,” Jones admitted.
“My next race is Sea Otter in two weeks. As one of the Life Time races, it’s super important to perform well. It’s one of the more technical gravel races, so my mountain bike background helps there. I think having been in New Zealand over the summer is an advantage, so I should be in good form.”
The 2026 Life Time Grand Prix series begins at Sea Otter Classic, with the 90-mile pro gravel races held on Thursday, April 16 in Monterey, California.
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