© WBD Sports Events Limited. 2025
MTB World Series
Article - 15 May 25
Downhill
Enduro

Bielsko-Biała: When is it? Who is riding? How and where to watch?

After an iconic UCI Enduro World Cup season opener in Pietra Ligure, Finale Outdoor Region (Italy), the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series keeps the Gravity action coming this weekend with downhill also joining the fray in the Enduro Trails of Bielsko-Biała, Poland.

After an iconic UCI Enduro World Cup season opener in Pietra Ligure, Finale Outdoor Region (Italy), the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series keeps the Gravity action coming this weekend with downhill also joining the fray in the Enduro Trails of Bielsko-Biała, Poland.

We look at everything you need to know about the Bielsko-Biała round of the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series, including when the enduro and downhill events are scheduled to take place, who is racing and how to watch.

4WTqImRz57tIrS5BCoJxEEl4IwjPHmJPp2onNi15.jpgWHEN?

The 2025 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series round in Bielsko-Biała, Poland, starts with the UCI Enduro World Cup at 8:00 (UTC+2) on Saturday, May 17 and concludes with the Men Elite UCI Downhill World Cup at 14:00 (UTC+2) on Sunday, May 18.

Below are the key timings for race weekend. All times are UTC+2 (EST+6/BST+1/CEST):

Saturday, May 17

  • 08:00 – UCI Enduro World Cup
  • 12:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualifying 1 Women Elite
  • 13:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualifying 1 Men Elite
  • 14:15 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualifying Women Junior
  •  14:40 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualifying Men Junior
  • 15:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualifying 2 Women Elite
  • 15:50 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualifying 2 Men Elite

Sunday, May 18 

  • 11:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Women Junior
  • 12:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Men Junior
  • 13:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Women Elite
  • 14:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Men Elite

BuGOYkkTyYRLOIGghnRvhiFXIjMamcsb7IjLMtoQ.jpg

WHERE CAN I WATCH?

There will be several ways to watch the Gravity-packed action unfold in Poland.

For the UCI Enduro World Cup, there will be a course preview featuring the route and its key sections, practice day and race day video highlights on the official YouTube channel, key race moments on social media and live timings on the official WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series website.

For the first UCI Downhill World Cup of the season, you can watch the finals live anywhere in the world. Both the Men Junior and Women Junior UCI Downhill World Cup races will be broadcast live on the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series YouTube channel, while the Elite finals will be shown on one of the below channels or streaming services. Pre-show starts at 12:45 UTC+2, so set a reminder to join Ric McLaughlin live from Poland:

North America

  • Canada – Flobikes
  • USA  – Max

South & Central America

  • All Central and South American territoriesMTBWS TV
  • Caribbean – Rushsports 2

Asia

  • Indonesia, Macao, Malaysia, Mongolia, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand – Eurosport
  • China – Zhibo.tv
  • All other Asian territoriesMTBWS TV

Oceania

  • Australia – Stan Sport
  • New ZealandMTBWS TV

Africa

All African territoriesMTBWS TV

Europe*

  • Andorra – MAX, Eurosport
  • Austria – discovery+, Eurosport
  • Belgium – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Bosnia & Herzegovina – Max, Eurosport
  • Bulgaria – Max, Eurosport
  • Croatia – Max, Eurosport
  • Czechia – Max, Eurosport
  • Denmark – Max, Eurosport
  • Faroe Islands – Max, Eurosport
  • France – Max, Eurosport, L’Équipe Live 2 (OTT)
  • Germany – discovery+, Eurosport
  • Hungary – Max, Eurosport
  • Ireland – TNT Sports
  • Italy – discovery+, Eurosport
  • Moldova – Max, Eurosport
  • Montenegro – Max, Eurosport
  • Netherlands – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • North Macedonia – Max, Eurosport
  • Norway – Max, Eurosport
  • Poland – Max, Eurosport
  • Portugal – Max, Eurosport
  • Romania – Max, Eurosport
  • Serbia – Max, Eurosport
  • Slovakia – Max, Eurosport
  • Slovenia – Max, Eurosport
  • Spain – Max, Eurosport
  • Sweden – Max, Eurosport
  • SwitzerlandMTBWS TV
  • Türkiye – Max, Eurosport
  • United Kingdom – discovery+, TNT Sports
  • All other European territoriesMTBWS TV

pSGu1uoaxNHhfwlfw7oAWeC2zgY4LZVAcDXBiVEK.jpg

RIDERS TO WATCH

The Bielsko-Biała venue made its UCI World Cup debut last year and instantly became a rider and fan favourite. Ronan Dunne (Mondraker Factory Racing), Marine Cabirou (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team), Charles Murray (Specialized Gravity) and Isabeau Courdurier (Lapierre Zipp Collective) won their respective events in 2024, but few would predict an exact repeat in Poland this weekend.

In the Men’s enduro competition, Slawomir Lukasik (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) is the rider to watch. The 32-year-old Pole led in Pietra Ligure, Finale Outdoor Region last weekend until the final stage, when Daniel Booker’s searing final run saw the Australian leapfrog him at the last, meaning Lukasik missed out on his first UCI World Cup win by less than a second. It was a similar story in Bielsko-Biała last year too, and he will be hoping he can use home support to his advantage in getting over the line.

Lukasik won’t have it easy though. While team-mate and 2024 UCI Enduro World Cup overall series winner Richard Rude (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) will be focusing on downhill this weekend, reigning UCI Enduro World Champion Alex Rudeu, Jack Moir (YT Mob) and 2024 UCI E-Enduro World Cup overall series winner Ryan Gilchrist (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) will all be in contention.

KRqiUk1QGu8k8BD5NwypeATzz51Q3QGKmoHWxjH8.jpg

The Women’s Enduro competition is also wide open with last year’s winner Isabeau Courdurier not racing and Pietra Ligure’s fastest rider Harriet Harnden (AON Racing – Tourne Campervans) focused on downhill. Morgan Charre (Pivot Factory Racing) has the experience, but Ella Conolly has also started 2025 strong with a second-place finish in Italy. 

In Downhill, the reigning WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series overall winners Valentina Höll (YT Mob) and Loïc Bruni (Specialized Gravity) will be aiming to get their title defences off to a strong start while hoping to make amends for missing out on the top spot in Poland last year.

Harnden is Höll’s most interesting competition and it will be intriguing to see how the Enduro rider handles a different format, while Nina Hoffman (Santa Cruz Syndicate), Cabirou and Tahnée Seagrave (Orbea/FMD Racing) can all lay down race-winning runs.

In the Men’s Elite, Rude is another format-crossing rider worth keeping an eye on, while downhill purists Troy Brosnan (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team), Finn Iles (Specialized Gravity) and Amaury Pierron (Commencal/Muc-Off by Racing Addiction) mean it’s not a foregone conclusion for Super Bruni.

w5uktzLF8U8EQoqtNskJiMH6xqa6CZdvouxbbPmr.jpg

Racing gets underway on Saturday, May 17 in Bielsko-Biała.

Full schedule and event details are available HERE.

Share

Latest news

Article
05 Dec 25
How WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series Wildcard Teams are decided
Short Track
Cross-Country
Downhill

The WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series experienced a shake-up at the start of the 2025 series.For the first time in UCI Mountain Bike World Cup history, UCI World Series Team status was introduced, which guaranteed spots on the start line at every round for 40 teams – 20 in Endurance and 20 in Gravity. The new regulations were introduced to make UCI World Cups more competitive whilst providing teams and athletes with greater opportunities for growth and visibility.While 30 of the spaces (15 across each format) were decided by UCI ranking points, five Endurance and five Gravity outfits would earn their places via yearlong wildcard spots.Fiercely contested, they were selected by the UCI and Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) Sports based on a scoring matrix that included criteria such as UCI team ranking, UCI Continental Series participation and results, athlete profiles, sponsor profiles and media reach.In Endurance, it saw the likes of multi-discipline stars Mathieu van der Poel and Puck Pieterse’s Alpecin-Deceuninck secure its place despite missing out via UCI rankings, while Reece Wilson’s new outfit AON Racing-Tourne Campervan was guaranteed a spot in the Downhill start hut.The 2026 season will see the same five year-long wildcard spaces on offer across Endurance and Gravity, with 19 teams currently awaiting their fate to see if they’ve been selected for next season.Teams likely to be in contention include Alpecin-Deceuninck, AON Racing-Tourne Campervan, and other year-long wildcard picks from last year such as Continental Atherton, Pivot Factory Racing (Gravity), Liv Factory Racing and Mondraker Factory Racing (Endurance).ADDITIONAL SPOTS AT EACH ROUNDIn addition to the wildcard UCI World Series Team spots, there will be up to eight wildcard spots available to regular UCI Mountain Bike teams in each format at each UCI World Cup round.These follow the same selection criteria as the year-long picks, but also considers the home nation of the team as well as recent results.These round-based picks aren’t just to make up the numbers either, and teams and riders can propel themselves from wildcard entrants to major contenders – Rogue Racing’s Thibault Daprela recording a podium (Val di Sole - Trentino, Italy) and 16th in the Downhill overall in 2025 despite only entering as a wildcard.

Article
28 Nov 25
How a team secures WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series Team status
Short Track
Cross-Country
Downhill

The off-season is a time for riders to enjoy some relaxation and recuperation before readying themselves for an intensive training block that will get race ready ahead of the first round of the 2026 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series in May.But this time of year is also an interesting proposition for teams, who are waiting eagerly to find out if they’ve done enough to secure UCI World Series Team status, and a spot at every UCI World Cup of the 2026 season.A new qualifying process was introduced at the start of the 2025 season to enhance the competitiveness and excitement of each UCI Mountain Bike World Cup, while establishing a clear development pathway to the highest level of mountain biking. All teams are required to register with the UCI to be classified as either a UCI Mountain Bike Team or a WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series Team (previously known as UCI MTB Elite teams). UCI World Series Team status is awarded to 20 teams in each of the Endurance and Gravity formats, which guarantees participation at each UCI World Cup.Like in the 2025 series, the 20 teams for each format are made up of the top 15 in the UCI team rankings and five year-long wildcard spots that are awarded based on a scoring matrix.A team’s UCI points are calculated by adding together the points of the four highest scored riders of each team without making a distinction between men Elite, men Junior/U23, women Elite and women Junior/U23. These points are accrued across all UCI-registered events (not just WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series points) and are scored in finals only. The rankings cut off was 28 October 2025.There is a bit of a difference for 2026 though. Unlike in 2025, points aren’t transferred with riders to their new teams, meaning there’s no opportunities for a team to make shrewd off-season signings to increase their chances of bagging UCI World Series Team status. Also, this season will see teams ranked 1-10 offered a two-year licence, and the teams ranked 11-15 offered a one-year licence, unlike last season where the top 15 ranked teams were only offered a one-year licence.Being in the top 15 provides an invitation to become a UCI World Series team, but it doesn’t guarantee participation—teams still need to accept and complete registration.Three-quarters of the UCI World Series teams decided, the remaining 10 spots are awarded to year-long wildcards decided by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) and Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) Sports, while there are a number of other ways that teams and riders can bag their spot on a startline or in the start hut, including round-by-round wildcard entries and a rider’s individual UCI ranking.

Article
10 Nov 25
Goldstone and Höll double up with UCI Downhill World Cup Overall titles
Downhill

Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) and Vali Höll (YT Mob) might have come away with all the spoils from the 2025 season, but the 10-round series was one of the most competitive in recent memory with one nail-biting conclusion that will live long in the memory.Downhill mountain biking is fast, furious, and extremely unpredictable, but two riders had bucked the trend in recent history, showing consistency where others had crumbled and cruising to back-to-back overall series in 2023 and 2024.All eyes were on Loïc Bruni (Specialized Gravity) and Vali Höll (YT Mob) once more as the longest-ever season got underway in Bielsko-Biała, and whether any other athletes could end their dominance.As it turns out, they could. The men’s contest witnessed the rise of Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) – the 21-year-old Canadian returning to action after a year on the sidelines with injury – and a battle for the top spot with Bruni that wouldn’t be decided until the very last run of the series. While Höll still came out on top, her fourth overall series was the Austrian’s toughest test yet, with five different women standing on the top spot over the year. Goldstone’s record-equaling run and five wins enough to topple BruniWhen Loïc Bruni won qualifying and finals at the opening round in Bielsko-Biała (Poland), his competitors could have been forgiven for thinking that the series was already over. While there were still nine rounds to go, the Frenchman’s signature consistency would mean that his win in Poland probably wouldn’t be his last of the year, while only an uncharacteristic crash or injury would prevent him from winning his fifth overall title and third consecutive crown.Jackson Goldstone had other ideas though. Fresh from a season sat on the sidelines with injury, the Canadian had a point to prove after an impressive debut elite season in 2023 where he won his first two UCI Downhill World Cups and narrowly finished second behind Bruni in the overall. And although he could only manage a top-20 finish at the season opener, it was a warm-up for what was to come.From Loudenvielle-Peyragudes onwards, he was unstoppable, equaling Aaron Gwin’s (Gwin Racing) record for four wins in a row, while he had back-to-back perfect weekends in Val di Sole (Italy) and La Thuile (Italy). His results propelled him to the top of the standings, and at the midway point, he had a healthy 195-point lead over Bruni.His run would end in Pal Arinsal (Andorra), Bruni getting the better of Goldstone for his second win of the series, and the Frenchman would chip away at Goldstone’s lead with each round – the Canadian dropping points in Les Gets, Haute-Savoie (France) and Bike Kingdom Lenzerheide (Switzerland), while Bruni was his metronomic self with two top-five finishes.Neither made the podium in Lake Placid’s (USA) UCI Downhill World Cup debut, and things were poised tantalisingly with just Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada) – Bruni leading by 72 and able to take the series even if Goldstone won.On finals day, Goldstone did all he could in front of a partisan home crowd, putting in the first 3:30 of the day to sit in the hotseat with only Luca Shaw (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) and Bruni to go. The American could only go second fastest, and then all eyes were on the start hut awaiting Bruni’s drop in. But it never came – the Frenchman injured during training on finals day and knowing that he wouldn’t be able to compete, let alone beat, Goldstone’s time. The Canadian had done it, winning the UCI Downhill World Cup Overall series on home soil, completing a Hollywood ending to a redemption story that also included winning the UCI Downhill World Championship. Höll shows grit to complete hat-trick of overall and world championship doubleWhile the men’s contest was a two-horse race, the women’s was the most open it has been in years. After Vali Höll’s dominance since breaking through to the elite class in 2021, the Austrian had a fight on her hands from the off.It was Tahnée Seagrave (Orbea/FMD Racing) who started strongest – the experienced Brit back to her best to take the opening round in Bielsko-Biała (Poland) – before Gracey Hemstreet (Norco Race Division) took up the mantle, winning her first two UCI Downhill World Cups.Marine Cabirou (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) and Nina Hoffmann (Santa Cruz Syndicate) got in on the action in Val di Sole (Italy) and La Thuile (Italy), but at the halfway point, Höll still led the overall despite not winning a weekend.It was her consistency that had got her there – the 23-year-old using her experience to grind out podium finishes even if she didn’t take the win – but as her winless UCI World Cup streak extended beyond a year, many wondered if it would be enough to see her through to the end of the season.Seagrave and Hemstreet cleaned up at the next three rounds, but their inconsistency couldn’t shake Höll from the overall top spot, and when the Austrian had her first opportunity to mathematically secure her fourth title and third consecutive crown in Lake Placid (USA), she seized it with both hands while her rivals’ challenges wilted.Fresh off the back of winning her fourth consecutive UCI Downhill World Championship, Höll blitzed the field on the venue’s new downhill course, going fastest in each intermediate split to win by almost three seconds. Hemstreet meanwhile could only manage 10th, meaning the title wouldn’t go to the final round.A crash in her Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada) finals run saw Höll finish down in 14th, but she was still able to extend her lead – neither Hemstreet or Seagrave scoring a point over the weekend, meaning it was as you were for the top three spots in the overall. Alran edges Vermette and Rosa keeps it consistent in JuniorsWhile the Elite contests were the closest they’ve been in years, the Juniors were on another level.In the women’s field, Rosa Zierl (Cube Factory Racing) and Alehta Ostgaard (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) were the dominant forces – the pair claiming four wins each from the 10 rounds. It was Zierl who edged it though, beating Ostgaard by 45 points – the American’s failure to score anything in Loudenvielle-Peyragudes coming back to haunt her at the season’s end.The men’s contest meanwhile was an epic that featured two riders who often put down runs faster than the elites that followed. Max Alran (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) ultimately had the edge over Asa Vermette (Frameworks Racing/5Dev), but just 12 points separated the pair after 10 rounds of fierce and frenetic racing. It was Alran’s four wins to Vermette’s two that were the difference – the Frenchman outscoring his American rival despite the latter’s podium finishes.Next year the season kicks-off in South Korea.

Don't miss out

Sign up for latest news now
Series partner
WHOOP
Main partners
AWSMichelinShimanoEvents.com
Official Partners
MotulOakleyRockshox
Official Suppliers
FacomGoProCommencalMavic
Brought to you by
UCIWarner Brothers Discovery Sports
©WBD Sports Events Limited. 2025