LONDON — Dairy-loving daredevils threw caution to the wind Monday for one of Britain's most extreme annual events: Cheese rolling.
Cheered by several thousand spectators, scores of reckless racers chased 7-pound (3 kilogram) wheels of Double Gloucester cheese down the near-vertical Cooper's Hill, near Gloucester in southwest England. The first racer to finish behind the fast-rolling cheese in each race gets to keep it.
The races have been held at Cooper's Hill, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) west of London, since at least 1826, and the sport of cheese-rolling is believed to be much older.
The rough-and-tumble event often comes with safety concerns. Few competitors manage to stay on their feet all the way down the 200-yard (180 meter) hill.
This year's hill was especially slippery and muddy after recent rain. Members of a local rugby club lined up at the bottom to catch the tumbling competitors.
Tom Kopke from Munich, Germany won one of the three men's races. He said attitude was more important than technique.
''You start and then the adrenaline takes over and you just go, go go," Kopke said.
''Look at this event, look at this hill," added the muddy, breathless winner. "England is mad. I love it."