Doddie Weir’s wife to join England World Cup winner on charity cycle following his MND diagnosis

Pictured, left to right: Hamish Weir, Kathy Weir, and Ben Weir.
Author: Danyel VanReenen, PAPublished 1st Jun 2026
Last updated 1st Jun 2026

The wife and son of the late Borders rugby legend Doddie Weir have announced they will join former England captain Lewis Moody on a 500-mile charity cycle to raise money for research into motor neurone disease (MND).

The 2003 World Cup winner is taking on the challenge in support of the My Name’5 Doddie Foundation, which was set up by the Scotland star following his diagnosis with the disease.

Kathy and Hamish Weir will ride alongside Moody, who last autumn revealed he too has MND.

He said having Weir’s family alongside him will be “incredibly poignant and powerful”.

Doddie Weir died in November 2022 - aged 52 - after a six-year battle with MND.

“Doddie did so much to change the conversation around MND, and in many ways this ride feels like continuing something he started,” Moody added.

“There’s a real sense of carrying the baton forward. Doddie inspired people because he faced this disease head on with unbelievable courage, humour and determination, and I think all of us involved in the ride feel a responsibility to keep pushing that fight forward.

“When you see Kathy and Hamish there beside you, it’s impossible not to feel extra motivation.

"This ride is about raising money, of course, but it’s also about showing the MND community that we’re still fighting, still driving awareness, and still refusing to accept that this disease cannot be beaten.”

Lewis Moody revealed he had been diagnosed with MND.

The Lewis XV’s challenge will begin on Sunday, June 14th at the northernmost Prem Rugby club, Newcastle Red Bulls, and will end at the Allianz Stadium in Twickenham, south-west London, on Saturday, June 20th, to deliver the match ball for the Gallagher Prem Rugby Final.

And the trio will be joined by a group of rugby stars during the challenge.

“When you get diagnosed with something like MND, you very quickly realise how important people are,” Moody said.

“This ride is about mates coming together, communities coming together, and hopefully showing people living with MND that they are not alone.

“This disease affects families everywhere and we need people to rally behind the MND community in the same way rugby people always rally behind each other.

“If people can donate, come out and support us along the route, or simply help spread the word, it genuinely makes a difference. We want this to feel like something the whole rugby community is part of.”

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Paul Thompson, director of fundraising at the My Name’5 Doddie Foundation, said: “Lewis has already inspired so many people through the way he has approached his diagnosis, and this challenge is another example of that courage and leadership.

“This is about much more than rugby. It’s about friendship, family, resilience and communities coming together behind a common cause. Every mile ridden and every pound raised will help us continue accelerating research towards effective treatments and, ultimately, a cure for MND.”

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