Ex-footballer finishes Tour De France challenge
Thomas, who lives in Worcestershire, has been part of Tour 21 team which has been following the exact same route as the Tour De France, a week ahead of the professionals racing.
He was given just three months to live in 2003 after being diagnosed with leukaemia, but overcame the illness two years later after treatment and a stem cell transplant.
He first took part in the challenge for Cure Leukaemia in 2005, when he was six months in remission, and the 2025 race he completed on Sunday is his last, he said.
Speaking to BBC Hereford and Worcester after crossing the finish line in Paris, he said the experience had been "magical".
"Everyone's been so good on this event. We've bonded as a team," he said.
"I think you become like a family and after a few weeks together doing a ridiculously hard challenges every day is a bond that's built for life."
"I started this 20 years ago. It was all purely to raise money for Cure Leukaemia and get [professor] Charlie Craddock the funding he needed to fulfil his dream of building a clinical research centre that would fast-track all the wealth of knowledge that's in the science labs to benefit patients.
"Over the last 15 years I can say for sure with the infrastructure we've set up, it's working and people are largely being saved on the back of these fantastic guys raising money for a great cause."
He said he was not normally an emotional man but seeing his family at the end of the race was tough.
"I knew everybody would be here [at the finishing line] and I had a little moment to myself and then when I came here I just wanted to enjoy everyone's enjoyment and see it in their eyes," he added.
"I've done it numerous times... but taking on a challenge like that and meeting in Paris is magical."
His wife Julie said she was "so proud".
"It's just fantastic. It's a huge challenge and I think 90% is your mental state," she said.
"I think Geoff being a professional sportsman, I think he just has that drive in him, no matter what's happening to your body, you just get on with it.
"I think he doesn't really think about what's going on at the time, he just pushes on for the charity really, for the cause."
Thomas, who was appointed an MBE in 2021 for his work raising money for cancer charities, said everyone that took part should be proud of themselves and what they had achieved.
"I am proud of them and I'm proud of the charity and that's why I carry on doing this and oddly, even though I was the most unfit I've been taking on this challenge, it's inspired me even more than any other."
Follow BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.
Thomas prepares for seventh charity Tour De France
Ex-footballer in fundraising vow after Tour exit
Ex-Wolves star finishes Tour de France for charity
Geoff Thomas receives MBE for cancer charity work
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