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MTB World Series
Article - 19 Sep 25
Downhill

Bruni and Höll Fastest in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide Downhill Qualifying

With only three races between now and the season finale in Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada), every point counts in the race for the overall title

The UCI Downhill World Cup’s final European round is upon us in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide (Switzerland), and with only three races between now and the season finale in Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada), every point counts in the race for the overall title.

Conditions were dry and sunny in Lenzerheide’s Bike Kingdom resort, with riders sampling another Swiss descent two weeks on from the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in Champéry, and looking to lay down a fast time to make it through to tomorrow’s finals.

It was also the first chance for athletes to show their form as the 2025 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series nears its conclusion, and whether they’re still on a high from Champéry, have managed to put a disappointing rainbow run behind them, or are on a downward trajectory and ready for the off-season.

HÖLL BACKS UP RAINBOW WIN 

Valentina Höll (YT Mob) still hasn’t won a UCI Downhill World Cup this season, but finds herself at the top of the overall standings – narrowly having the edge over Gracey Hemstreet (Norco Race Division). The Austrian made it four UCI Downhill World Championships in a row in Champéry, and looks like she’s hitting top form just at the right time, going fastest in Q1 in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide. The 23-year-old was fastest in three out of four intermediate splits, and had more than a two-second advantage over second-place qualifier, Nina Hoffmann (Santa Cruz Syndicate).

It could have all been so different, though, with Myriam Nicole (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) the fastest in the first split and on for a top-three finish before a crash in the final sector saw her cross the line 52 seconds back. The French icon decided not to start Q2.

Hemstreet, meanwhile, recovered from a slow start but qualified eighth and will have a nervous wait in tomorrow’s finals to see if she will finish ahead of her title rival and close the gap even more with two rounds to go.

Q2 was stacked with big hitters who had missed out first time round – Anna Newkirk (Frameworks Racing/5 Dev), Gloria Scarsi (MS-Racing) and Tahnée Seagrave (Orbea/FMD Racing) all needing a second stab at the course to qualify.

In the women’s Junior category, Denmark’s Rosa Marie Jensen narrowly edged out overall leader Rosa Zierl (CUBE Factory Racing) by less than a second to be last off the ramp in tomorrow’s finals.

BRUNI SHOWS HE’S FULLY FOCUSED ON CHASING DOWN GOLDSTONE

Loïc Bruni (Specialized Gravity) had a disappointing UCI World Championships in Champéry. The five-time UCI Downhill World Champion finished down in 49th after a crash on course, missing out on the chance to add a sixth elite rainbow jersey to his collection.

The 31-year-old showed that he’s put that behind him, though, and is fully focused on overthrowing Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) in the overall, going fastest in every intermediate split to record a 2:47.654. Also, Bruni remains the only rider this season to have qualified for finals at the first time of asking.

Luca Shaw (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) will be confident going into tomorrow’s finals, though – the American was just 0.111 seconds behind Bruni, and the only rider to get within a second of the flying Frenchman. 

Newly crowned UCI Downhill World Champion Goldstone started slowly in his first qualifying run whilst wearing the rainbow jersey, recording the 10th fastest time in intermediate split 1, before rallying to qualify fourth, 1.323 seconds back on Bruni.

While the rest of the top 20 was made up of UCI Mountain Bike World Series Team riders, there was also wild card in the mix – Jackson Connelly (The Alliance) qualifying 12th and making it through to his first UCI Downhill World Cup finals of the 2025 series.

Riders forced to take a second bite of the cherry and make it to finals via Q2 included Andreas Kolb (YT Mob), two-time winner in Lenzerheide Amaury Pierron (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction), Les Gets, Haute-Savoie (France) winner Ronan Dunne (Mondraker Factory Racing DH), Benoit Coulanges (Scott Downhill Factory) and Laurie Greenland (Santa Cruz Syndicate). 

For Finn Iles (Specialized Gravity) and Richard Rude Jr (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team), however, the weekend is over, with the North American pair missing out in both qualifying rounds and now forced to wait until Lake Placid Olympic Region, New York (USA) before they get to go between the race tape once more.

Asa Vermette (Frameworks Racing / 5DEV) and Tyler Waite (Yeti / Fox Factory Race Team) secured first and second respectively in the men’s Junior qualifying, with overall series leader Max Alan (Commencal/Muc-off by Riding Addiction) having to settle for eighth.

Racing continues tomorrow (Saturday, September 20) in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide from 11:30 CEST with the women’s Junior Finals. Find out how to watch here.

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Article
30 Oct 25
Blevins blitzes the men’s field while consistency key to Maxwell’s overall XCO title
Short Track

The WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike Series would witness something of the changing of the guard in the Cross-country formats for 2025. Reigning UCI Cross-country Olympic (XCO) World Champions Alan Hatherly (Giant Factory Off-Road Team - XC) and Puck Pieterse (Alpecin-Deceuninck) would instead focus on the road – both skipping the first two and final two rounds of the year – while one of the G.O.A.Ts Pauline Ferrand-Prevot didn’t set foot on the trails once all season as she targeted (and won) the Tour de France Femmes. Elsewhere, consistent performers of previous seasons – Nino Schurter (Scott-SRAM MTB Racing Team) and Alessandra Keller (Thömus Maxon) had age and a comeback from injury to contend with.This void at the top of the table opened up the chance for other riders to stake their claim. And it was an opportunity that both Christopher Blevins (Specialized Factory Racing) and Samara Maxwell (Decathlon Ford Racing Team) seized with both hands.The pair were ever present at all 10 rounds of the series. But their debut title wins were down to more than simply showing up – both Blevins and Maxwell displaying the consistency needed be crowned overall champions. From an unprecedented three XCO-XCC doubles to an almost-perfect podium season, here’s how Blevins and Maxwell did it.BLEVINS BLOWS COMPETITORS AWAY BEFORE OVERCOMING MID-SEASON SLUMP IN STYLEPrior to the 2025 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series, Christopher Blevins had only won two XCO races on the biggest stage – a sprint finish in Mairiporã (Brazil) in April 2024 and in Snowshoe (USA) back in September 2021. While the 27-year-old would have to settle for second best to teammate Victor Koretzky (Specialized Factory Racing) at the opening round in Araxá, Minais Gerais (Brazil), when the field returned six days later, the American made sure he didn’t miss again.His victory in South America was his third of the opening two rounds – Blevins also picking up the opening two UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup wins – and started a run of first-places that would last until round four in Saalfelden Leogang - Salzbugerland (Austria). A 17th place on the slopes in the Austrian alps wasn’t enough to dent his overall lead, while by the series’ midpoint in Val di Sole - Trentino (Italy), his advantage was more than 300 points.Blevins’ form appeared to desert him in Pal Arinsal’s (Andorra) high altitude arena – a 29th place his worst result of the year – and things didn’t seem to improve with 12th and 27th in Les Gets, Haute Savoie (France) and Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide (Switzerland), respectively. But when the chance to mathematically secure the overall arose at home in Lake Placid Olympic Region (USA), the American rose to the occasion – clinching a third UCI XCO World Cup and XCO-XCC double of the season, and with it the title.Blevins could relax as the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series crossed the border into Canada for the final round, where teammate Martin Viduarre Kossmann (Specialized Factory Racing) secured second in the overall, and Luca Martin (Cannondale Factory Racing) third.MAXWELL CLINCHES NEW ZEALAND’S FIRST UCI WORLD CUP OVERALL CROWNSamara Maxwell had an impressive debut elite season in 2024, finishing within the top 20 at every UCI XCO World Cup she entered, but the 23-year-old took things up a gear for 2025 and signaled her intent from the off.At the opening round in Araxá, the New Zealander edged Nicole Koller (Ghost Factory Racing) and teammate Savilia Blunk (Decathlon Ford Racing Team) to record her debut UCI XCO World Cup win and the top spot in the overall, and it was a position she held on to all the way to the season’s end.Although she would only claim one more victory – in Pal Arinsal – the young rider’s consistency made her a runaway force that was impossible to contain. After her win in the season opener, Maxwell would become a feature of each round’s podium until race weekend 8 in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide at the end of September – when she finished sixth (her lowest position of the entire year).Other riders looked like they might be able to threaten Maxwell’s dominance. Puck Pieterse (Alpecin Deceuninck) put together a hat-trick of wins in Nové Mesto na Moravě (Czechia), Saalfelden Leogang - Salzburgerland and Val di Sole, but the 2024 UCI XCO World Champion lost her way in the second-half of the season. Jenny Rissveds (Canyon CLLCTV XCO) went one better, winning the final four UCI XCO World Cups of the series and the UCI XCO World Championship, but the Swede had ultimately left it too late to topple Maxwell. The Decathlon Ford Racing Team rider had to wait until the Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada) season finale to confirm her crown, but signed off her season with a fourth second-place to take her and her country’s first-ever UCI World Cup overall series. Elsewhere, Rissveds would have to settle for second, with 2024 UCI XCO World Cup overall winner Alessandra Keller third.CORVI AND TREUDLER CROWNED U23 WINNERSIn the U23 field, another two riders dominated proceedings with podium-perfect seasons between them.In the women’s Under 23, Valentina Corvi (Canyon CLLCTV XCO) completed her second U23 season in style, picking up podiums at every round she entered and three wins in Val di Sole, Pal Arinsal and Les Gets. The Italian could afford to skip two rounds and still win at a canter to Vida Lopez De San Roman (Trinity Racing).In the men’s U23, it was the Finn Treudler (Cube Factory Racing) show. The Swiss 22-year-old dominated the field, winning eight out of 10 rounds with the only blemishes on his near-perfect record third-place in Nové Mesto na Moravě and second in Val di Sole. His 601-point victory in the overall over Rens Teunissen Van Manen (KMC Ridley MTB Racing Team) is one of the most one-sided performances ever, and it will be interesting to see how he fairs when stepping up to the elites in 2026.

Article
09 Oct 25
Mont-Sainte-Anne: When is it? Who is Riding? How and Where to Watch?
Short Track
Cross-Country
Downhill

While three out of six titles were decided last time out in Lake Placid Olympic Region, New York (USA), there are still three series on the line in the Cross-country Olympic (XCO), Cross-country Short Track (XCC) and Downhill. It couldn’t be in a more fitting location either – Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada) hosting its record 30th UCI World Cup.  We look at everything you need to know about the Mont-Sainte-Anne round of the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series races, presented by Events.com, including when the Cross-Country Olympic (XCO), Cross-country Short Track (XCC) and Downhill events are scheduled to take place, who is racing and how to watch.   WHEN?  The 2025 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series round in Mont-Sainte-Anne starts with the Women Under 23 UCI XCC World Cup at 09:45 (UTC-4) on Friday, October 10 and concludes with the Men Elite UCI XCO World Cup at 15:30 (UTC-4) on Sunday, October 12. Below are the key timings for race weekend. All times are UTC-4 (BST+5/CEST +6): Friday, October 10 12:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 1 Women Elite 13:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 1 Men Elite 14:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification Women Junior 14:20 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification Men Junior 15:05 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 2 Women Elite 15:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 2 Men Elite 9:45 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Women U23 10:35 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Men U23 16:20 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Women Elite 17:00 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Men Elite Saturday, October 11 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 14:10 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Men Elite Sunday, October 12 09:00 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Women U23 11:00 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Men U23 13:30 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Women Elite 15:30 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Men Elite WHERE CAN I WATCH? There will be several ways to watch the action unfold at Canada’s only Cross-country and Downhill UCI World Cups of the 2025 season. The UCI Downhill World Cup Qualification day can be followed on live timing and across social media. For the tenth and final UCI Cross-country Olympic, UCI Cross-country Short Track and UCI Downhill World Cups of the season, you can watch the finals live anywhere in the world. Both the men’s and women's UCI Downhill World Cup Junior races will be broadcast live on discovery+ (in front of paywall), HBO Max* (in front of the sports add-on) and MTBWS TV (included in subscription), while the Elite finals will be shown on one of the below channels or streaming services: North America Canada – Flosports, RDS USA – HBO Max South & Central America All Central and South American territories – MTBWS TV Asia Indonesia, Macao, Malaysia, Mongolia, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand – Eurosport China - Zhibo.TV (Only Elite Downhill races live) All other Asian territories – MTBWS TV Oceania Australia – Stan Sport New Zealand – MTBWS TV Africa Angola, Burundi, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Cape Verde, Cote d'lvoire, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial, Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mayotte, Mozambique, Mali, Mauritania, Namibia, Nigeria, Niger, Reunion, Rwanda, South Africa, Eswatini, São Tome and Principe, St Helena and Ascension, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Seychelles, Socotra, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zimbabwe, and Zambia - Supersport All African territories – MTBWS TV Europe Andorra – HBO Max, Eurosport Austria – discovery+, Eurosport Belgium – HBO Max, Eurosport Bosnia & Herzegovina – Max, Eurosport Bulgaria – HBO Max, Eurosport Croatia – HBO Max, Eurosport Czechia – HBO Max, Eurosport, CT Sport+ (only Elite XCO and XCC races live) Denmark – HBO Max, Eurosport Faroe Islands – HBO Max, Eurosport France – HBO Max, Eurosport, L’Equipe (Only Elite DHI and XCO races live) Germany – discovery+, Eurosport Hungary – HBO Max, Eurosport Ireland – TNT Sports Italy – discovery+, Eurosport Moldova – HBO Max, Eurosport Montenegro – HBO Max, Eurosport Netherlands – HBO Max, Eurosport North Macedonia – HBO Max, Eurosport Norway – HBO Max, Eurosport Poland – HBO Max, Eurosport Portugal – HBO Max, Eurosport Romania – HBO Max, Eurosport Serbia – HBO Max, Eurosport Slovakia – HBO Max, Eurosport Slovenia – HBO Max, Eurosport Spain – HBO Max, Eurosport Sweden – HBO Max, Eurosport Switzerland – MTBWS TV , SRF/RSI (Only Elite XCC and XCO races live) Türkiye – HBO Max, Eurosport United Kingdom – discovery+, TNT Sports All other European territories – MTBWS TV RIDERS TO WATCH In Downhill, just 72 points separate Loïc Bruni (Specialized Gravity) and Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) in the overall, and whoever comes out on top has a good chance of securing the title. It’s advantage Super Bruni in terms of points and experience, but the Canadian closed the gap on the Frenchman with a higher finish in Lake Placid Olympic Region (fourth vs sixth), has home advantage, and has a 100% record at Mont-Sainte-Anne as an elite rider – winning his last race at the venue at the end of 2023. Even if Goldstone wins on Sunday, Bruni can still be a heartbreaker and deny the 21-year-old a debut title by finishing on the podium to claim his fifth overall title. The showdown also has the chance to be the closest overall title battle in history, which is currently 2010 when Gee Atheron beat Greg Minnaar by just seven points. In terms of recent form, Luke Meier-Smith (Giant Factory Off-Road Team - DH) will be targeting a follow up to his first-ever UCI World Cup win last Saturday, Luca Shaw (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) recovered from a two-second deficit at intermediate split two to finish runner-up just 0.7 seconds back on Meier-Smith, Henri Kiefer (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) has recorded back-to-back podiums at the last two rounds, and Bike Kingdom-Lenzerheide (Switzerland) winner Amaury Pierron (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) appeared to be onto a flyer on Whiteface Mountain before a mistake in the second sector cost him a shot at back-to-back wins. Shaw, Pierron and Loris Vergier (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) are all in the running for third in the series, too. The women’s overall might have been decided in Lake Placid Olympic Region, but there’s still plenty at stake. Valentina Höll (YT Mob) recorded the first perfect weekend of 2025 in the women’s field to clinch her fourth series. The Austrian will be looking to add UCI World Cup win number 13 to her collection in Mont-Sainte-Anne and sign off a turbulent year in style. Her closest rival in the rankings, Gracey Hemstreet (Norco Race Division), will be looking to bounce back in front of a home crowd after a poor showing south of the US-Canada border, while Tahnée Seagrave (Orbea/FMD Racing) can leapfrog the 20-year-old in the standings if results go her way.  Myriam Nicole (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) is another rider to look out for. The Frenchwoman was best of the rest in Lake Placid Olympic Region and has been unfortunate with some big crashes in qualifying and finals this year, but the 35-year-old clearly has good race pace as she searches for her first win of the year. Either side of the Downhill action is the Friday’s XCC and Sunday’s XCO, with both of the women’s series still to be decided. Evie Richards (Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli) is in control of the short track series, but both Alessandra Keller (Thömus Maxon) and Jenny Rissveds (Canyon CLLCTV XCO) can overhaul the Brit if results go their way. All three have been in scintillating form of late, so expect them to go tyre-to-tyre until the finish line in Mont-Sainte-Anne.  Rissveds will also be a favourite in Sunday’s Women Elite UCI XCO World Cup – the Swede winning four of her last five Olympic-distance races, including the UCI XCO World Championship and last Sunday’s final in New York state. But the 31-year-old has most probably left it too late to catch Samara Maxwell (Decathlon Ford Factory Racing) in the overall series – the New Zealander’s 183-point advantage almost unassailable unless disaster strikes. Maxwell herself is also a favourite to record her third UCI XCO World Cup win of 2025, while Richards and Keller are likely to contend for the podium places. Christopher Blevins (Specialized Factory Racing), meanwhile, wrapped up both the men’s XCO and XCC overall titles last weekend with two sprint victories over teammate Adrien Boichis (Specialized Factory Racing). The American can afford to take it easy north of the border, but few would bet against him attempting a fourth XCO-XCC double of the series. Boichis will also be in the frame in Mont-Sainte-Anne, while Victor Koretzky (Specialized Factory Racing) and Martin Vidaurre Kossmann (Specialized Factory Racing) are currently sitting in second place in the XCC and XCO standings, respectively. Looking to spoil Specialized’s party, though, is Luca Martin (Cannondale Factory Racing) who able to contest for the first runner-up in both series. The Frenchman hasn’t hit the same heights as in Pal Arinsal (Andorra) and Les Gets, Haute-Savoie (France) after being forced to miss the UCI MTB World Championships with Covid, but an eighth-place finish on Sunday shows he’s heading in the right direction.  Racing gets underway on Friday, October 10 in Mont-Sainte-Anne. Full schedule and event details are available HERE.  

Article
08 Oct 25
Titles on the Line at Mont-Sainte-Anne Finale
Short Track
Cross-Country
Downhill

The legendary Canadian bike park welcomes Endurance and Gravity athletes for a record 30th UCI World Cup, and with titles still on the line in Cross-country and Downhill, fans can expect a nail-biting conclusion to the 2025 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series on the slopes of Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada), presented by Events.com.  The dust hasn’t even settled after an attritional and fast-paced Lake Placid Olympic Region, New York (USA) race weekend, but the best mountain bikers on the planet are gearing up to do it all again north of the border. And with three out of six series titles still yet to be decided –Christopher Blevins (Specialized Factory Racing) clinching the Men’s Cross-country Olympic (XCO) and Cross-country Short Track (XCC), and Valentina Höll (YT Mob) defending her Downhill overall title last time out – expect the racing to be bar-to-bar from the off.  The venue – Mont-Sainte-Anne’s world-famous bike park, with more than 165km of trails and runs for all disciplines from Cross-country Olympic (XCO), Downhill (DHI) and freeride – is a fitting location for the season finale too. The Laurentian Mountains spot will be hosting its 30th UCI World Cup since it made its debut in 1991, and it has also held the UCI World Championship three times – 1998, 2010 and 2019 – in that period. BRUNI V GOLDSTONE GOES TO THE WIRE, WHILE HEMSTREET AND SEAGRAVE BATTLE IT OUT FOR SECOND PLACE After nine rounds of racing, Loïc Bruni (Specialized Gravity) and Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) can only be separated by 72 points. While Goldstone has more wins to his name – four consecutive, record-equaling victories – and clinched the UCI Downhill World Championship too, it’s Bruni who is in the driving seat. The Frenchman has been here before, having won the overall series four times, including 2023 and 2024. But unlike last year, Super Bruni still has a lot to do to be sure of completing a hat-trick of consecutive titles. The 31-year-old has experience on his side and needs to finish on the podium if Goldstone wins to guarantee the overall, but the Canadian will be racing on home soil and will benefit from the boost of a partisan crowd. The 21-year-old will also have fond memories of the last time he raced at Mont-Sainte-Anne, when he won in his first Elite season in 2023. He also took a Junior UCI World Cup win at the venue in 2022. After being forced to sit out most of 2024 with an injury, it would be a Hollywood ending for the Santa Cruz Syndicate rider. Elsewhere, the fight for third is between Luca Shaw (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team), Loris Vergier (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) and Amaury Pierron (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction), while Lake Placid Olympic Region victor Luke Meier-Smith (Giant Factory Off-Road Team - DH) will be extra buoyed after his debut UCI World Cup win last weekend. The other Downhill winner on Whiteface Mountain was Vali Höll (YT Mob). The Austrian had a perfect weekend, winning Q1 and finals to score maximum points and seal her fourth overall series, and third in a row. The 23-year-old’s victory also broke a UCI World Cup winless streak that stretched back to June 2024, although she has been remarkably consistent this campaign – Lake Placid Olympic Region her eighth consecutive podium. Her main title rival, Gracey Hemstreet (Norco Race Division) had a weekend to forget and was forced into Q2 before placing 10th in finals. But the 20-year-old Canadian will have to dust herself down and go again in Mont-Sainte-Anne if she’s to hold on to second place in the series. Tahnée Seagrave (Orbea/FMD Racing) is only 123 points behind and will be keen to cap off a strong first season with new outfit Orbea/FMD Racing. WOMEN'S TITLES GO DOWN TO THE WIRE IN CROSS-COUNTRY FORMATS There are titles to be decided on all three days of the UCI World Cup in Mont-Sainte-Anne, with it still all to play for in the women’s XCO and XCC contests. On Friday, all eyes will be on Evie Richards (Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli) and whether she can hold off Alessandra Keller (Thömus Maxon) and Jenny Rissveds (Canyon CLLCTV XCO) to take her first UCI XCC World Cup overall series. The Brit has a 150- and 160-point lead over her respective competitors and lines up in Canada in great form – finishing second behind Rissveds in her last two UCI XCC World Cups after a mid-season wobble that threatened to let Keller in. She can afford to finish eighth on Friday, but Keller and Rissveds will be ready to pounce if Richards does make a mistake. Of the two, it’s Rissveds who appears to be the most likely – the Swede is in the form of her life and coming off the back of her second XCO-XCC double of the season in Lake Placid Olympic Region. The Canyon CLLCTV XCO rider is also in contention for the XCO overall in Sunday’s final, but would require Samara Maxwell (Decathlon Ford Racing Team) to effectively DNF to have a serious shot at the title. The New Zealander has a 183-point advantage over Rissveds and could even tie up her and her country’s first-ever UCI World Cup overall title if she wins Friday’s XCC and Rissveds finishes 31st. The most likely scenario is that the overall won’t be decided until Sunday, and with Maxwell only finishing off the podium once this series – when she finished fifth in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide (Switzerland) – the 23-year-old already has one hand on the trophy. In the men’s field, Christopher Blevins will be able to enjoy a victory procession in Mont-Sainte-Anne in his red series leader jersey and number one plate – the American tying up both overall series in style on home soil in Lake Placid Olympic Region by doing his third XCO-XCC double of the series. The 27-year-old had dominated the early stages of the season, but appeared to be grinding his way to the titles after disappointing results in Pal Arinsal (Andorra), Les Gets, Haute-Savoie (France) and Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide. Class is permanent, though, and Blevins answered his critics by dominating on the fast and frenetic Mt Van Hoevenberg course. Although top spot is settled, second place is still the play for in both series, with Blevins’ teammates currently occupying the runners-up rankings. In XCC, Victor Koretzky (Specialized Factory Racing) has a narrow, 36-point advantage over Luca Martin (Cannondale Factory Racing), while Charlie Aldridge (Cannondale Factory Racing) is 99 points back in fourth. The UCI XCC World Champion had a disappointing race in Lake Placid Olympic Region, crashing on the unforgiving rock garden before getting caught up behind another incident to finish 31st. The Cannondale Factory Racing duo will sense their opportunity, but will need the Frenchman to have another bad day at the office to have the best chance. In the XCO standings, Martin is again the underdog and sits 74 points in arrears of Martin Vidaurre Kossmann (Specialized Factory Racing). The Chilean had the edge over the Frenchman last Sunday, finishing fourth to his eighth, and the Cannondale Factory Racing rider will need to secure his second-ever UCI XCO World Cup win to give himself the best chance at second in the standings. Racing gets underway in Mont-Sainte-Anne on Friday, October 10 with the Men U23 and Women U23 UCI XCC World Cup. Full schedule and event details are available here.

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