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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.

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15 May 26
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Pidcock arrives in strong form following a busy spring that has included Strade Bianche, Milano–Sanremo, where he finished second, and a victory at Milano–Torino, alongside stage racing appearances at the Volta a Catalunya and Tour of the Alps. His road campaign was briefly disrupted by a crash earlier in the season, but the Brit returns to a venue where he has already enjoyed success, having taken victory in the UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup the last time he competed in Nové Město na Moravě in 2024.Pieterse arrives in standout form following an impressive run across the road Classics, including second place finishes at both La Flèche Wallonne and Liège–Bastogne–Liège, as well as podium contention at the Tour of Flanders and Milano–Sanremo Donne.  She returns to the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series off the back of five victories last season, including a win in the UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup in Nové Město na Moravě.Both return to the mountain bike circuit with proven pedigree, adding significant star power to an already stacked start list.Find out where to watch all the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series action in Nové Město na Moravě HERE.

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12 May 26
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Short Track

Apocalyptic conditions greeted the UCI XCO World Cup riders in South Korea as heavy rain turned the course into a mud bath, leaving races that seemed to play out in slow motion. 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The bike was working so smooth up and down and it was such a great atmosphere here.”LILLO SECURES DOMINANT MAIDEN WINWith Specialized Factory Racing’s reigning champion Christopher Blevins missing the opening XCO round with a collarbone injury suffered in training in South Korea, the Elite Men’s field was wide open and the young guns stepped up in style.The entire podium was aged 25 or under while another of the most impressive riders of the day was Finn Treudler (CUBE Factory Racing), making his first appearance in an Elite UCI World Cup.Treudler’s afternoon was derailed by a series of mechanical issues that the rookie struggled to manage, but even if he had enjoyed a trouble-free race then it would’ve been a struggle to match the peerless Lillo.Like Rissveds, Lillo built a comfortable lead of 17 seconds over Treudler in the first lap as the 22-year-old was the only rider within half a minute of the early favourite. 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At the beginning of the week, when I looked at the forecast and I saw it was rain predicted for Sunday, I already told my teammates that Sunday’s going to be my day,” Lillo said.“When I woke up in the morning it was like ‘ok, today is the day’, I was so nervous before the start. We had a plan and everything just happened.“During the race, before the last lap, I didn’t really have any emotions in me. I crossed the finish line and the feeling I have at the moment, I’ve never experienced something in my life like that.It’s really difficult to put into words, I think I need a few minutes to understand what just happened.”CORVI AND HALTER STORM TO U23 WINSValentina Corvi became the first UCI XCO World Cup winner of the 2026 season as she stormed to U23’s victory at MONA YongPyong.The Italian attacked from the off and built a 40-second lead on the opening lap that she continued to grow throughout the race, eventually finishing 3:28 ahead of Elina Benoit (Lexware Mountainbike Team) as Bailey Cioppa rounded out the podium.Returning to the category that she won by 178 points last season, Corvi stamped her authority on the race immediately with Benoit clearly the second-best rider as she looks to improve on her seventh-place overall finish in 2025.“It’s amazing, today has been a really hard race,” Corvi said. “The mud was really hard and we had to run a lot, it was really tough. I’m super happy to win this.“I just tried to make my pace, my speed and not to make mistakes in the downhill. And just keep pushing, I saw the gap was becoming really big, I’m really happy. I just enjoyed this win and I’m looking forward to the next stages.”Nicolas Halter didn’t have quite as straightforward an afternoon as Corvi, but he also led every lap en route to a 35-second victory.Paul Schehl (Lexware Mountainbike Team) rallied on the final lap to cut almost half a minute off Halter’s lead, but the Swiss rider had built up such a buffer that he still crossed the line arms aloft with no other riders in sight.Like Corvi, Schehl simply rode the rest of the pack off his wheel early on, and Canyon XC Racing’s Thibaut François Baudry was the only other rider to finish within a minute of him.“I can’t believe it yet,” Halter said. “I already felt really good in the first uphill and I knew today is a good day. I think the key today was to ride smooth. Everybody makes faults but no big faults so I think that was the key today. Full gas all the time but never in the dark red.“I just concentrated on myself, I knew the race will be long, it was pretty slow so I just tried to ride smooth all the time and then I got the gap.”Five countries were represented on the U23 podiums, a fraction of the 37 nations that were on the entry sheets across the UCI Cross-country and Downhill World Cup rounds in South Korea.However, neither Halter nor Corvi could help their teams make much impact in the mixed team standings as Specialized Factory Racing lead the way after round one, with Trek - Unbroken XC and Cannondale Factory Racing just 56 and 62 points behind.Frei, Lillo, Halter and Corvi’s victories brought an end to the opening WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series of the season but the Cross-country competitors aren’t out of action for long as the UCI World Cup returns to Nové Město na Moravě in Czechia from May 22-25.

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