Prince William’s Surprise Video Message Leaves BBC Radio 2 Star in Tears After Raising £9.5 Million for Children in Need

LONDON – It was the finish line moment that turned a grueling triumph into a tear-soaked spectacle. After five punishing days of pounding pavements, conquering hills, and battling blisters across 135 miles of northern England, BBC Radio 2 presenter Sara Cox staggered across the tape in Pudsey, Leeds—home of the charity’s iconic bear—on Friday afternoon, her Pudsey backpack sagging like a faithful companion. The 50-year-old DJ, drenched in sweat and emotion, had just clocked a staggering £9.5 million for Children in Need, shattering expectations and proving one woman’s grit could move a nation. But as the cheers faded and confetti rained down, a video screen flickered to life with a message so unexpected it reduced Cox to heaving sobs: a personal congratulations from Prince William, the Prince of Wales.

The footage, played live on Radio 2’s Scott Mills breakfast show, captured William’s warm smile against a Kensington Palace backdrop. “Sara, I just wanted to say a massive well done on your incredible 135-mile challenge,” he said, his tone laced with genuine admiration. “You’ve inspired so many people, and the money you’ve raised for Children in Need will change lives. From all of us at Kensington Palace, thank you—and take a well-deserved rest.” Cox, mid-hug with her husband Ben and three children, froze. Her knees buckled. Then the dam broke—tears streaming as she clutched her phone, whispering, “Oh my God, William… I can’t believe it.” The crowd of 500 supporters, including local schoolkids waving Pudsey flags, erupted in a roar that drowned out her gasps. “She broke down the moment she heard it,” a BBC insider told The Sun. “It wasn’t just the words—it was the royal seal on her madness. No one saw that coming.”

Prince William Sends Surprise Video to Radio Host During Charity Challenge

The Great Northern Marathon Challenge kicked off Monday in Kielder Forest, Northumberland, a five-day odyssey spanning Northumberland, Durham, North Yorkshire, and West Yorkshire—equivalent to five marathons crammed into relentless terrain. Cox, a teatime show staple known for her bubbly banter, traded microphones for trainers, vowing to “give it everything” despite zero ultra-running experience. Day one: 27 miles through misty moors, donations ticking past £1 million by dusk. Day two: Sleep-deprived cramps forced backward walking on steep ridges, but a FaceTime from Coldplay’s Chris Martin strumming Fix You spiked the pot by £180,000. By Thursday, crossing into Yorkshire, she’d hit £4 million—prompting William’s pre-recorded pep talk, filmed earlier that week at the charity’s request.

Day five was agony incarnate: blistered feet wrapped in tape, quads screaming from 2,500 feet of elevation gain, and hallucinations of Pudsey “driving a tractor.” Yet crowds lined the route—farmers in wellies, school choirs belting Walking on Sunshine—propelling her forward. “I’ve run through storms in my life, but this? For the kids who need it most,” Cox rasped to cameras at mile 120. Crossing the line at 3:45 PM, she collapsed into her family’s arms as Mel C performed Northern Star live, the total surging past £9.5 million—a record for a solo Radio 2 effort.

William’s intervention, tied to his Heads Together mental health patronage overlapping Children in Need’s work, amplified the royal twist. “It’s a nod to her vulnerability—she’s shared her own battles with loss and anxiety,” a palace source said. Cox, composing herself for the mic, choked out: “From a Bolton girl to this? Thank you, Your Royal Highness. And Britain—you carried me.” Tonight, she’ll announce the final tally live from Salford, 44 miles south, before collapsing into an ice bath.

From personal storms to national hero, Cox’s odyssey reminds us: the longest miles are shared. The royal shock? Just the cherry on a charity cake baked in sweat and solidarity.