© WBD Sports Events Limited. 2026
MTB World Series
Article - 01 Apr 25
Short Track
Cross-Country

Araxá to kickstart 2025 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series in style

The Brazilian venue is hosting the first of its back-to-back UCI Cross-country World Cup rounds this weekend, and if its debut last year is anything to go by, fans and riders are in for some amazing racing.

The Brazilian venue is hosting the first of its back-to-back UCI Cross-country World Cup rounds this weekend, and if its debut last year is anything to go by, fans and riders are in for some amazing racing.

After a six-month break, the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series is back with a bang as the Endurance contests open their 2025 accounts with two weekends of consecutive racing in Araxá, Minas-Gerais, Brazil

Located in the country's southeast, 600km south of the capital Brasília, the area is world-renowned for its spa, mountains and waterfalls. Last year, it added mountain bike to that list, with Araxá putting on a UCI World Cup to remember. 

Its red clay course and tropical backdrop truly set it apart from the rest of the venues on the calendar, and with a fifth of the UCI Cross-country Olympic (XCO) and Cross-country Short Track (XCC) World Cup series to be decided on its trails, points secured in Brazil could make all the difference come the season’s end in October. 

BAR-TO-BAR RACING 

Araxá set high standards in its WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series debut in 2024, putting on one of the most memorable races of the season – Simon Andreassen (Orbea Fox Factory Team) coming out on top in a four-way sprint for the line to decide the Men Elite UCI XCO World Cup round. Fans will be hoping for more of the same this time out, and the XCO and XCC courses should deliver – both combining flat, high-speed sections with fast, gravity-fuelled descents.

While the venue is going to be the same for the next two weeks, this weekend’s results shouldn’t make round 2 a foregone conclusion either – course designers are keeping the riders on their toes with a modified XCO course to navigate next week

EARLY SEASON FORM-FINDER 

The first round of the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series can always be a bit of a lottery with predictions. While some riders will have got between the race tape in smaller contests in the weeks leading up to this weekend, these aren’t necessarily true indicators of form, with some using it as part of their training to peak for Brazil and others returning from off-season injuries or surgery. 

Last year, Andreassen clinched that iconic XCO win, while Haley Batten (Specialized Factory Racing) achieved an XCO-XCC double. The former is on a new team for 2025, although he looks up to speed on his Orbea with a win in the MTB French Cup in March, while Batten hasn’t raced since a crash at the UCI Mountain Bike Marathon World Championships last September ended her 2024 season early, and she is staying in the US rather than travelling to Brazil for the first two rounds. 

One rider looking to prevent Andreassen securing back-to-back wins in Araxá is Victor Koretzky (Specialized Factory Racing). The Frenchman won the UCI XCC World Cup round at the venue last year and will be hoping score maximum points to improve on his second in the XCO overall in 2025. He will face stiff competition though from his team-mate Christopher Blevins (Specialized Factory Racing), Charlie Aldridge (Cannondale Factory Facing) and the G.O.A.T, Nino Schurter (Scott-SRAM MTB Racing Team). 

In the women’s field, all eyes will be on Alessandra Keller (Thömus Maxon) to see whether the reigning UCI XCO and XCC World Cup overall winner has recovered from surgery in time to mount a defence of her titles. Meanwhile, Jenny Rissveds (Canyon CLLCTV XCO) has experience of podiuming in Araxá, and Loana Lecomte (BMC Factory Racing) will aim to continue her end-of-season form with her new team. 

Outside of the obvious favourites, two other riders worth keeping tabs on are Riley Amos (Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli) and Kira Böhm (Cube Factory Racing). The reigning U23 UCI XCO World Cup overall winners did the XCO-XCC doubles in Araxá in 2024 and have already shown they can mix it with the Elites – Böhm winning a CIMTB race in Araxá against a strong South American field as recently as last weekend. 

In the XCC meanwhile, specialists with plenty to prove include Luca Schwarzbauer (Canyon CLLCTV XCO) and the UCI XCC World Champion Evie Richards (Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli). 

Racing gets underway in Araxá on Saturday with the U23 short track – full schedule and events details are available here.

Share

Latest news

Article
27 Jun 26
UCI Enduro World Cup: Colonaci and Conolly Head Leaderboard After Opening Day in Val Di Fassa
Enduro

Three adrenaline fuelled stages greeted riders on the opening day of enduro racing as the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series arrived in the spectacular setting of the Dolomites.Italian home favourite Tommaso Calonaci showed his consistency in the Men’s Elite category with top three stage placings to lead overall overnight. Meanwhile, Ella Conolly was locked in battle with UCI Enduro World Champion Elly Hoskin throughout the day in the Women’s Elite event and also has a slender lead heading into Sunday.Val di Fassa, Trentino is the first two-day race format of the season, with a 59.6-kilometre course featuring 2,633m of descent across two days.With four stages ahead of them tomorrow both Calonaci and Conolly lead their respective events by just three seconds overall.In the Junior categories Hugo Marti Montessinos leads the Men’s event by 11 seconds overall and Nežka Libnik has an advantage of over one minute in the Women’s.CALONACI HAS STELLAR DAY TO LEAD MEN’S ELITE BATTLETommaso Calonaci is on course to secure the best UCI Enduro World Cup result of his career, provided he can hold off a stacked Men’s Elite field across Sunday’s four decisive stages. The 23-year-old Italian emerged as the standout performer in Val di Fassa, Trentino, taking an unexpected overnight lead.Fellow Italian Tommaso Francardo (Abetone Vittoria Nencini Sport Factory Team) laid down the benchmark time in the iconic Tutti Frutti. Calonaci followed closely, just three tenths adrift. Overall series leader and defending champion Sławomir Łukasik (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) stayed firmly in contention, only 1.4 seconds back, with round one winner and reigning UCI World Champion Alex Rudeau hovering just 3.5 seconds off the lead.There was early drama for Canadian Elliot Jamieson, whose return to the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series was compromised by a mechanical issue that cost him 12 seconds.Stage two, a 1.85km mix of technical and high-speed descending on 9.90, reshuffled the order slightly. Rudeau capitalised on the terrain, edging out Canada’s Evan Wall by a tenth of a second in a tightly contested run to move back into contention. Calonaci remained consistent at 1.8 seconds back, while Łukasik dropped a further three seconds and Francardo conceded four.The short but punchy final stage, Ciasates “EWS” (1.25km), demanded an all-out effort ahead of Sunday’s racing. Dutch rider Tristan Botteram set the pace, narrowly beating Calonaci by a tenth, with Rudeau another second behind. Łukasik, however, slipped to ninth on the stage, losing 4.9 seconds.With just four stages remaining, the Men’s Elite race is finely poised. Calonaci leads by three seconds over Rudeau, while Botteram sits third at 5.8 seconds. Łukasik remains within striking distance, just 7.1 seconds off the lead heading into the final day.CONOLLY AND HOSKINS GO HEAD-TO-HEAD IN DOLOMITES BATTLEAfter winning the opening round and finishing runner-up in Saalfelden-Leogang Salzburgerland, Ella Conolly arrived in Val di Fassa, Trentino as the overall UCI Enduro World Cup leader. The British rider, who also triumphed at this picturesque venue last year, wasted no time asserting herself on the opening stage.Despite its reduced length of just 2.2km and an uphill start, Tutti Frutti played to Conolly’s strengths, allowing her to put her power to good use and take the stage win.Reigning UCI Enduro World Champion Elly Hoskins is still searching for her first podium of the season and immediately applied pressure, finishing just 3.6 seconds behind. Fresh from her maiden UCI Enduro World Cup victory last weekend, Winnifred Goldsbury also stayed firmly in contention, placing third a further second back.Tutti Frutti claimed an early victim, as Simona Kuchyňková (Cube Action Team) dropped 20 seconds, while Italy’s Nadine Ellecosta (Abetone Vittoria Nencini Sport Factory Team) conceded eight seconds after suffering a rear wheel puncture. Determined to bounce back in front of a home crowd, Ellecosta responded strongly on stage two, the 1.85km technical test of 9.90. The reworked stage combined a demanding opening section with faster, flowing terrain, setting up a tight battle that Ellecosta edged by just eight tenths of a second over Conolly, with Hoskins 1.9 seconds further back.Mélanie Pugin (Speed Project) also recovered well after losing 11 seconds on the opening stage, finishing just 2.5 seconds off the fastest time on 9.90.The short but intense final stage of the day, Ciasates “EWS” (1.25km), delivered a physical test featuring a rapid opening descent followed by a punchy uphill section. Hoskins seized the opportunity to claw back time ahead of Sunday’s finale, beating Conolly by 1.4 seconds, while Goldsbury remained in touch just two tenths further adrift.Heading into the final day, the fight for overall victory remains wide open. Conolly leads Hoskins by just three seconds, with Goldsbury in third, 12 seconds off the pace.MONTESSINOS AND LIBNIK COMMAND JUNIOR CATEGORIESHugo Marti Montessinos is firmly on course to make it three wins from three in the Men’s Junior category. The Frenchman edged a tightly contested opening stage on Tutti Frutti, beating Šimon Lehký by just three tenths of a second.Lehký’s challenge unravelled on stage two, where a problem cost him 31 seconds and effectively ended his bid for victory. Montessinos capitalised immediately, dominating the 9.90 stage with a commanding five-second margin over Italian Lorenzo Noferini, while Australia’s Harper Nelmes completed the top three.The third and final stage of the day offered a glimmer of hope for his rivals. Canadian Nolan Weiss took the stage win, finishing 1.4 seconds ahead of Nelmes, with France’s Tommy Bougon in third.Despite placing fifth on the final stage, Marti Montessinos remains firmly in control, carrying an 11-second advantage into Sunday’s four remaining stages. Behind him, the fight for the podium is intensifying, with Nelmes and Weiss separated by just one tenth of a second.In the Women’s Junior category, Nežka Libnik delivered a flawless opening day. Fresh from her victory in the previous round, the Slovakian rider swept all three stages and holds a commanding lead of over one minute heading into the final day.Elena Frei secured second place on the opening two stages and has established a clear gap in the runner-up position, while a tightly contested battle for third is unfolding between Bélinda Baudet, Ella Mårtensson and Romy Williams (Speed Project).The WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series continues in Val di Fassa, Trentino on Sunday, with four decisive stages set to determine the UCI Enduro World Cup outcome. Click here for information on how to follow the final day of action.

Article
26 Jun 26
Course Unveiled for Round 4 of 2026 UCI Enduro World Cup in La Thuile
Enduro

The UCI Enduro World Cup will stay in Italy after its two-days in the heart of the Dolomites, but heads west to the Alps and the Valle d’Aosta resort of La Thuile.La Thuile’s Bike World is well-traversed in the world of Enduro, having hosted five rounds of the Enduro World Series between 2014 and 2021. Its 170km of high-alpine trails provide a smorgasbord of riding options.The venue made its WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series debut in 2025 and produced a UCI Enduro World Cup to remember with it featuring the first-ever night-time stage in the format’s history.A stage completely lit by 23 floodlights and utilising the same technology as those used in Formula 1’s night races to ensure there are no shadows on course, it produced a spectacle unlike anything seen in Enduro before, as riders navigated the specially designed trail as the sun set on the idyllic surroundings.Last season, Elite Men’s UCI Enduro World Cup overall winner Sławomir Łukasik (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) and Elite Women’s runner-up Simona Kuchynkova edged incredibly close races – Kuchynkova beating Ella Conolly by a little over two seconds, while it was even closer in the men’s race with just five-hundredths of a second separating Lukasik and Charlie Murray.This year, riders will cover a total of 28.4km featuring 2969m of descending across four stages – three of which are new to the UCI Enduro World Cup. Following training on Friday, Elite and Enduro Open riders will tackle the four stages on Saturday, with the fourth and final night-time stage starting at 20:30 (CEST).Stage 1: TouraisseLength: 4.42 kmElevation: +84m / -874 mStage 2: BelfaceLength: 1.43 kmElevation: +124 m / -525mStage 3: CambogiaLength: 3.58kmElevation: +67 m / -826mStage 4: NightfallLength: 0.37kmElevation: +8 m / -117 m

Article
25 Jun 26
Official WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series e-shop NOW LIVE
Short Track
Cross-Country
Downhill
Enduro

The official WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series e-shop is NOW OPEN, giving fans a new way to show their love for the sport wherever they are, with the store available online globally and in-person at all major rounds in Europe.Designed for fans, riders and all enthusiasts of the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series, the collection allows supporters to carry the energy of the series with them - whether trackside, on the bike or at home.The store launches with a range of official clothing and accessories, including t-shirts, hoodies, long-sleeve tees, water bottles, hats, key rings, pens and mugs. Fans can also pick up race day essentials, including branded ponchos and sun hats, alongside 2026 season mementos featuring the racing calendar and 2026 branding.New WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series mascot Roki also has its own dedicated range, including t-shirts, a keyring and hat.Explore the e-store NOW!

Don't miss out

Sign up for latest news now
Series partner
WHOOP
Main partners
MONSTER ENERGYMichelinShimano
Official Partners
MotulSCOTT Rockshox
Official Suppliers
FacomGoProCommencalMavicGobik
Brought to you by
UCIWarner Brothers Discovery Sports
©WBD Sports Events Limited. 2025