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MTB World Series
Event - 13 Jul 23

Points leaders round up

It’s time to take stock of who is out front at the halfway point of the season.

UCI Mountain Bike Cross-country Short Track World Cup 

Luca Schwarzbauer (Canyon CLLCTV) 860 points (+80)

The king of horsepower, Luca Schwarzbauer continues to threaten to turn the world back on its axis with his corss-country short track (XCC) performances. Not only does he have almost irresistible reserves of firepower however, in 2023 he’s becoming a pass master in where and how to best deploy them. There have been some clever performances in his wake but ultimately no-one has found an answer to getting past the big German. 

Pauline Ferrand-Prevot (Ineos Grenadiers) 720 points (+14)

Consistency has long been multiple UCI World Champ Pauline Ferrand-Prevot’s watchword and this season, despite stating that she’d prefer to be winning UCI Mountain Bike Cross-country Olympic World Cup races, she’s been a podium constant on Friday evenings. 

UCI Mountain Bike Cross-country Olympic World Cup 

Nino Schurter (Scott SRAM MTB Racing Team) 848 points (+122)

Rumour has it that teams of scholars of linguistics are combing the farthest flung corners of the earth in an attempt to unearth as-yet unheard superlatives for what Nino Schurter is accomplishing in 2023. Joking aside, when he goes, he goes and no-one has any answers for it. Lenzerheide (where he took the overall wins record) and Val di Sole (where he vanished at the front of the race) were both vintage displays and well worthy of the points lead. Behind him his rivals continue to scrap and take points off of each other.  

Puck Pieterse (Alpecin Deceuninck) 1096 points (+296)

The Flying Dutchwoman is rapidly becoming the stand out, brightest star of 2023. She’s a threat in the UCI XCC World Cup but it’s in the UCI XCO World Cup where she really comes to life. Three out of four rounds have gone her way - it looks highly likely that more will follow. 

UCI Mountain Bike E-Enduro World Cup

Fabien Barel 546 points (+13)

One of the most established figureheads of international mountain bike racing refuses to hang up his painstakingly well-positioned cleats. Barel is pioneering onwards on a new battlefield - E-EDR. He remains cagey about how many more rounds he will compete in but rest assured if he has a leader's jersey to defend then he will take to the start stage.

Flo Espineira (Orbea Fox Enduro Team) 708 points (+49)

Popular Chilean Flo Espineira is one of those journeyman racers who seems to have landed in a format that suits her down to the ground. Laura Charles (Miranda Factory Team) remains a thorn in her side but as long as Flo keeps smiling, she’ll keep the lead.

UCI Mountain Bike Enduro World Cup

Richie Rude (Yeti / Fox Factory Racing Team) 1862 points (+173) 

They say that the third time's a charm but could this be the season that America’s Richie Rude finally clinches his third overall title for Yeti / Fox Factory Racing Team? The UCI Mountain Bike Enduro World Cup is proving to be a tightly-contested theatre of conflict as ever. Only two riders (Sam Hill and Cecile Ravanel) have managed to snare three titles in staged racing over the years. Rude is on two and, for now, looks confident of making it three. 

Isabeau Courdurier (Lapierre Zipp Collective) 2210 points (+144)

Much more so than the elite men’s ranks, elite women’s side of the UCI Mountain Bike Enduro World Cup is more used to seeing single dominating figures loom large at the top of the overall points tables. But over the last couple of years, that has shifted. New faces have emerged and rivalries have dug in. Isabeau Courdurier, already an overall winner, is under pressure from Morgane Charre (Pivot Factory Racing) but is still holding on to the jersey.

UCI Mountain Bike Downhill World Cup 

Camille Balance (Commencal AM Dorval) 1020 points (+38)

In the elite women’s ranks of the UCI Mountain Bike Downhill World Cup the momentum feels like it is firmly with one Valentina Höll (XXXX). The reigning UCI World Champion won at home in Leogang and backed it up with a win in Val di Sole Trentino. But, crucially, it’s not yet been enough to remove the leaders jersey from the shoulders of the reigning overall title holder Camille Balanche. The Swiss star will be hoping that the summer break takes some of the momentum out of Höll’s current stellar form. 

Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) 786 points (+12)

The early season headlines and plaudits (rightly) went to Jackson Goldstone’s rival Jordan Williams (Specialized Gravity) when he won his first ever elite level UCI World Cup win at the first time of asking at round one in Lenzerheide. But Goldstone kept working and kept building his speed. It nearly came together in Leogang before his irresistible performance in Val di Sole brought him not only that debut top flight win but also the overall title leaders jersey. It’s tight at the top but, for the moment, an 18 year-old Canadian leads the way. 

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18 Aug 25
Schurter to call time on career in Lenzerheide

The Swiss UCI World Cup round will be the record-breaker's last after 17 seasons.  Nino Schurter (Scott-SRAM MTB Racing Team) has announced that he will be lining up at a UCI World Cup for the last time in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide (Switzerland) on September 19 and 21.  The 39-year-old shared his retirement news on a post on social media, adding “it’s been one hell of a ride”.  In the video, Nino Schurter said: “Dear mountain bike family and beyond. For the past two decades, I've given my body, my mind and my soul to mountain biking. A beautiful sport, but also brutal at pro level. You either win races, you are a contender, or you're gone. There's no place for passengers. It's all or nothing. 24 hours a day, seven days a week. “When I raced my first World Championships, I was just a kid chasing a dream in Lugano 2003 and I left with my first international medal. What I didn't know then: that dream would carry me through countless unforgettable moments and let me win more than half of all of those championships along the way. “It's been one hell of a ride. But now it's time. Time to let my mind breathe and to spend more moments with the people who have supported me through it all. This year gives me the perfect goodbye. Crans-Montana will be my final XCO World Championships and Lenzerheide, my favourite race, will be my last World Cup. Two home races. I couldn't have scripted it better. “I want to thank everyone of you teammates, competitors, fans and the entire mountain bike community. You made this journey unforgettable. You were the reason I pushed harder. And you were the magic behind the medals. “I'm not disappearing. I'll still be riding, even racing (just not between the World Cup tape) and diving into new projects I can't wait to share soon. But for now, I'm giving it everything one last time. See you in Crans-Montana. See you in Lenzerheide. Let's make it legendary.” The Swiss rider is widely regarded as the greatest of all time, claiming 10 UCI Cross-country Olympic (XCO) World Championships, nine UCI XCO World Cup overall titles, 36 UCI XCO World Cups and bronze, silver and gold medals at Beijing 2008, London 2012 and Rio 2016 respectively.  Not only will Lenzerheide give him a home send-off on his record-extending 132nd UCI XCO World Cup start, but with three wins at the venue (2016, 2017 and 2023), it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Schurter going out at the top with win number 37 – another record. The retiring star added: “I’m incredibly thankful for everything I achieved in my life as a professional mountain bike racer. Now it's time to take all this experience into a new chapter of my life. I'm sure what comes from here is going to be just as exciting. Yes, I'm saying goodbye to cross-country World Cup racing but I will remain in the exciting world of cycling with all the great people involved.” We wish Nino the best in retirement from the UCI World Cup race tape!

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15 Aug 25
Race for second goes to the wire in Morillon, Haute-Savoie

While the UCI Enduro World Cup overall titles have already been wrapped up, it’s still all to play for in the battle to be best of the rest. The 2025 UCI Enduro World Cup has been a series for the ages with the return of two-day rounds, new venues, a first night stage, debut wins, and privateers going toe-to-toe with factory-funded teams. The main story of the season has been the dominance of two riders – Sławomir Łukasik (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) and Ella Conolly. The former has managed to step out of the shadows of teammate Richard Rude Jr (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team), winning half of the series’ six rounds to date and podiuming in the three to clinch his first overall series in La Thuile, Valle D’Aosta (Italy). Connolly, meanwhile, has been even more clinical, finishing in the top two all year and picking up a hat-trick of consecutive wins in Loudenvielle-Peyragudes (France), Saalfelden Leogang – Salzburgerland (Austria) and Val di Fassa - Trentino (Italy) to claim the women’s title – all without the support of a factory team. But while the overall series might be wrapped up before a rider even takes on the final round’s first stage, the battle for second place will go to the wire, with five riders mathematically in contention in the men’s field, and three in the women’s. MURRAY AND MELAMED FAVOURITES While five riders can still finish runner-up in the men’s series, the focus is on Charles Murray (Specialized Gravity) and Jesse Melamed (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team). The pair are separated by just 20 points, with the New Zealander holding the marginal advantage over his Canadian rival. For Murray to stand the best chance of staying in second, he has to win in Morillon – something he hasn’t managed all year – or place higher than Melamed. But there are still scenarios where he can remain second if the Canyon CLLCTV rider finishes higher in the round. For Melamed to leapfrog the Specialized Gravity rider, he has to win for the second time this series or finish with a points gap that is greater than 20 – for example, Melamed comes 2nd (350 points) and Murray 4th (280 points). Although these are the more likely scenarios, there are also some outsiders, starting with two-time UCI Enduro World Cup winner Daniel Booker. The Australian privateer is 165 points behind Murray, and must be ruing his 90th and 95th place finishes in Val di Fassa – Trentino and Loudenvielle – Peyragudes. To finish second, he needs to win his third round of the series, for Murray to finish 9th or lower and for Melamed to finish third or lower. And then we get to highly unlikely but mathematically possible. Fifth-placed William Brodie has to win, and for Murray to finish 31st or worse, while sixth-placed Greg Callaghan needs to score maximum points and for Murray to finish 97th. Although both are feasible, neither has won a UCI Enduro World Cup before, so there would need to be a lot of firsts for the stars to align. KUCHYNKOVÁ IN DRIVING SEAT The contest in the women’s overall isn’t as tight as the men’s, with Simona Kuchynková (Cube Action Team) holding a 180-point lead over third-place Nadine Ellecosta (Abetone Ancillotti Vittoria Factory Team), but the Slovakian isn’t a shoo-in for second, with Morgane Charre (Pivot Factory Racing) also in contention. To guarantee the runner-up spot, Kuchynková can afford to finish as low as seventh, with 230 points enough to give her an unassailable lead. For Ellecosta, she needs to win and Kuchynková to finish eighth or below, or to outscore the Slovakian by 240 points – a scenario that hasn’t occurred all year. Things are even tougher for Charre, who has to win and hope Kuchynková finishes ninth or lower. JUNIOR TOP TWOS EFFECTIVELY TIED UP In the Juniors, the men’s top two can’t change regardless of what happens in Morillon, with Melvin Almueis dominating the series with four wins to take the overall and Cooper Millwood the best of the rest despite missing a round in Val di Fassa – Trentino.   Lacey Adams (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) just needs to score one point to mathematically secure the junior women’s overall title, with Lucile Metge needing to win and for Adams to effectively not start. While Adams’ teammate Chloe Bear (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) can’t contest for the overall series, she can still make it a one-two for the American factory outfit but needs to outscore Metge and for the Frenchwoman to have a bad weekend in front of a partisan home crowd.

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