IIRC one trick organisers used to do was not finish the route at a bottom of a hill. In that route, between 90 and 100km there's hardly any climbing (obviously, as you are dropping down hill). You could drop to the 95km mark, then turn, climb back to the peak and finish your official route. Then you'd just carry on as a normal nonaudax to Eastbourne.
IIRC one trick organisers used to do was not finish the route at a bottom of a hill. In that route, between 90 and 100km there's hardly any climbing (obviously, as you are dropping down hill). You could drop to the 95km mark, then turn, climb back to the peak and finish your official route. Then you'd just carry on as a normal nonaudax to Eastbourne.