Mont-Sainte-Anne DH World Series Rd10 results, highlight vids & talking points

Mont-Sainte-Anne DH World Series Rd10 results, highlight vids & talking points

The final World Cup DH of the year took place in Canada. Here are the results, race report and highlights vids from Mont-Saointe-Anne.

RACE HIGHLIGHTS, Elite Women, MSA Round 10:

RACE HIGHLIGHTS, Elite Men, MSA Round 10:

DH World Series Rd10 MSA: Women’s Elite results

#Rider / TeamTimeGapPoints
1Marine CABIROU (FRA)CANYON CLLCTV FACTORY TEAM04:01.617250
2Nina HOFFMANN (GER)SANTA CRUZ SYNDICATE04:02.333+00:00.716210
3Myriam NICOLE (FRA)COMMENCAL/MUC-OFF BY RIDING ADDICTION04:03.913+00:02.296180
4Lisa BAUMANN (SUI)COMMENCAL SCHWALBE BY LES ORRES04:06.340+00:04.723150
5Sacha EARNEST (NZL)TREK FACTORY RACING DH04:08.824+00:07.207120
6Lisa BOULADOU (FRA)GOODMAN SANTACRUZ04:10.128+00:08.51190
7Jenna HASTINGS (NZL)PIVOT FACTORY RACING04:11.654+00:10.03780
8Phoebe GALE (GBR)ORBEA / FMD RACING04:12.812+00:11.19570
9Veronika WIDMANN (ITA)MONDRAKER FACTORY RACING DH04:14.537+00:12.92060
10Monika HRASTNIK (SLO)AON RACING – TOURNE CAMPERVANS04:15.269+00:13.65250

DH World Series Rd10 MSA: Men’s Elite results

#Rider / TeamTimeGapPoints
1Jackson GOLDSTONE (CAN)SANTA CRUZ SYNDICATE03:30.096250
2Luca SHAW (USA)CANYON CLLCTV FACTORY TEAM03:32.340+00:02.244210
3Andreas KOLB (AUT)YT MOB03:32.341+00:02.245180
4Dakotah NORTON (USA)MONDRAKER FACTORY RACING DH03:32.646+00:02.550160
5Ryan PINKERTON (USA)MONDRAKER FACTORY RACING DH03:33.052+00:02.956140
6Troy BROSNAN (AUS)CANYON CLLCTV FACTORY TEAM03:33.176+00:03.080125
7Amaury PIERRON (FRA)COMMENCAL/MUC-OFF BY RIDING ADDICTION03:33.193+00:03.097110
8Luke MEIER-SMITH (AUS)GIANT FACTORY OFF-ROAD TEAM – DH03:33.971+00:03.87595
9Loris VERGIER (FRA)COMMENCAL/MUC-OFF BY RIDING ADDICTION03:35.332+00:05.23680
10Dylan MAPLES (USA)COMMENCAL/MUC-OFF BY RIDING ADDICTION03:35.388+00:05.29275

Race reports and photos courtesy of Warner Bros. Discovery Sports:

Goldstone and Cabirou Take Wins After Downhill Finale Drama in Mont-Sainte-Anne

Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) clinched the Men Elite UCI Downhill World Cup overall title in the most dramatic of circumstances in his home country at Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada), presented by Events.com. Meanwhile, Marine Cabirou (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) took her 11th career UCI World Cup victory following an enthralling end to the women’s Elite category.

Latest Singletrack Merch

Buying and wearing our sustainable merch is another great way to support Singletrack

Coming into the weekend Goldstone was locked in a battle for overall honours with quickest qualifier Loïc Bruni (Specialized Gravity). However, a crash for Bruni in a training run resulted in the Frenchman suffering a thigh injury and not taking to the track for finals.

In front of his home crowd Goldstone rose to the pressure and put down a winning run, putting Luca Shaw (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) into second and early starter Andreas Kolb (YT Mob) into third.

The women’s Elite event was equally as dramatic after the top three riders overall all had issues on the Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada) course. Valentina Höll (YT Mob) suffered a flat tyre in the finals, Gracey Hemstreet (Norco Race Division) crashed out, and Tahnée Seagrave (Orbea/FMD Racing) pulled out of qualifying with a back injury. Cabirou had no such problems narrowly beating Nina Hoffmann (Santa Cruz Syndicate) into second, while fastest qualifier Myriam Nicole (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) finished third.

American riders Asa Vermette (Frameworks Racing/5DEV) and Aletha Ostgaard (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) replicated their quickest qualifying runs to win the men’s and women’s Junior categories respectively. Vermette also finished in the quickest time of the weekend of 3:29.7 – over three tenths quicker than Goldstone. Proving their consistency Max Alran (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) and Rosa Zierl (Cube Factory Racing) also held their nerves to seal the junior overall victories.

GOLDSTONE RISKS EVERYTHING AND MASTERS HOME COURSE

Youngster Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) completed the perfect season as he wrapped up the overall UCI Downhill World Cup series. The 21-year-old also matched the record of five Men Elite UCI Downhill World Cup wins in the same season of Aaron Gwin.

The previous day Bruni set the quickest qualifying time of 3:33.5 and had to finish on the podium to seal the overall title. However, after Goldstone flew down the slope in 3:30 and took the lead. Bruni then opted not to start due to a thigh injury sustained in practice, stunning his rival and handing him the overall honours.

After qualifying through Q2 the previous day, Ryan Pinkerton (Mondraker Factory Racing DH) had a point to prove early in the field. The young American set a benchmark time of 3:33.05, which was quicker than Bruni’s quickest qualifying time the previous day and earned him a fifth placed finish. Andreas Kolb (YT Mob) crashed in the previous day’s Q1 and had to book his final spot through Q2. The Austrian showed no fear with huge jumps into the rock garden and was one second faster than Pinkerton in a new benchmark time of 3:32.3.

The rock gardens caused havoc all weekend, with Martin Maes (Orbea/FMD Racing) suffering a flat tyre before Lachlan Stevens-McNab (Trek Factory Racing DH) crashed out. Kolb’s blistering time stood the test of time until Ronan Dunne (Mondraker Factory Racing DH) made his mark on the course. The Irish rider led by seven tenths before his tyre exploded on a rock following a heavy landing to end his run. American Dakotah Norton (Mondraker Factory Racing DH) was next to challenge the time of Kolb, but despite gaining time on the final rock garden with his high-rise bars he finished just three tenths slower to finish fourth.

All the pressure was on young UCI Downhill World Champion, Goldstone, who flew out of the starting gate on his home course and was in contention from the opening turns. Fighting through the trees Goldstone maintained his speed with huge jumps as he tripled over the difficult rock garden to maintain his speed. Goldstone mastered the final sector to finish two seconds faster than Kolb to go quickest and send the Mont-Sainte-Anne crowd wild.

Penultimate starter Luca Shaw (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) showed his experience with a controlled performance and was a second slower than Goldstone in the top sectors. Shaw gained momentum and charged through the rock garden to finish runner-up just two seconds behind Goldstone.

The drama then unfolded as all eyes were on the starting gate for the final competitor of this year’s series. However, Bruni did not appear, and his team later announced the earlier injury suffered in practice. The result gave Goldstone the overall series victory by 178 points ahead of Bruni in second and Shaw in third.

Following his victory Goldstone said: “I’m completely speechless. That was the run of my life. I knew I had to give it absolutely everything, it wasn’t pretty, I was making so many mistakes and getting super sketchy. The crowd were so amazing and cheered me on every step of the way. It didn’t feel quite right not battling with Loïc (Bruni) and I have no clue what happened. It’s not the way I wanted to win. I was hoping it to be a good fight right to the bottom, but we got it done at the end of the day.

“I hardly got any sleep last night, it was staring at the roof for two hours as my mind was racing. I just had to try and focus on myself. It was quite testing for me.

“I hope Loïc (Bruni) is alright. It was such a good battle with him this year, he’s someone I’ve looked up to my whole career and what an amazing rival to compete with.

“It’s such a cool and friendly rivalry we’ve got and we’ll be battling again next year.”

CABIROU FINISHES SEASON IN STYLE WITH VICTORY

Marine Cabirou (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) repeated her win at Mont-Sainte-Anne from 12 months earlier by building her speed through the lower sections of the Canadian course and finishing her season in style.

Young New Zealander Sacha Earnest (Trek Factory Racing Downhill) has overcome several injuries this season. The youngster showed her talent to set a blistering opening two sections and posted an early benchmark time of 4:08.8 which was good enough for fifth overall.

Last weekend, UCI Downhill World Champion, Valentina Höll (YT Mob) won her first UCI World Cup of the season and with it, the overall series. Höll looked determined for more success and put down an impressive top two sections which were four seconds faster than Earnest. The Austrian continued to build her speed down the track and led by 6.5 seconds, until suffering a punctured front wheel and had to walk the remainder of the track.

Meanwhile, Gracey Hemstreet (Norco Race Division) was looking for her first victory in Mont-Sainte-Anne after finishing runner-up last year. The Canadian started on the front foot and was 2.4 seconds faster than the quickest time before crashing out at the bottom.

Like 12 months earlier Cabirou mastered the Canadian course and built speed throughout her run to post a winning time of 4:01.6.

Nina Hoffmann (Santa Cruz Syndicate) won in La Thuile – Valle d’Aosta (Italy) earlier this season and was also bidding to sign off the campaign in style. The German competitor matched the time of Cabirou through the opening sections before finishing just seven tenths of a second slower.

Meanwhile, Camille Balanche (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) was in the thick of the podium battle in the final ride of her career, before crashing.

Final starter Myriam Nicole (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) was quickest qualifier and was hoping to end an indifferent season with victory. The French woman showed aggression through the technical section as she looked to repeat her UCI World Cup win at the same venue in 2019. Nicole was four tenths behind after the second sector and had everything to do in the second rock garden. However, the Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction rider finished 2.2 seconds behind in third.

Following her victory Cabirou said: “I’m happy to take the win today, it’s incredible.

“I tried my best the whole week to have a good result today, as last week was not very good for me. I have had some good races today and some really bad.

“I’m happy to take the win. I couldn’t have hoped for a better race to end the season. I made some mistakes during my qualification run and I wasn’t too happy with my qualification.

“Today I knew I had more in the bag so I just focused on myself and tried to give the best I could. I’m really happy to get my 11th win here, I love this track and this crowd.”

Höll topped the UCI World Cup overall standings followed by Hemstreet in second and Seagrave in third.

VERMETTE SIGNS OFF JUNIOR RANKS WITH VICTORY, WHILE ALRAN CLINCHES OVERALL

Asa Vermette (Frameworks Racing/5DEV) clinched the North American victory he desired and won the men’s junior category by over four seconds. The 18-year-old, who also took victory in Bike Kingdom – Lenzerheide (Switzerland), will move up to the Elite ranks next season and his winning time of 3:29.7 was faster than all the men. After finishing runner-up in Lake Placid Olympic Region, New York last weekend the American was fired up to go one better in Canada.

Jonty Williamson (Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team) set a benchmark time but left time on in the bottom two sections as he eventually finished third. Yeti/Fox Factory Race Team teammate Tyler Waite then put pressure on the later starters by going three seconds faster, and was runner-up. The precarious nature of the course was evident when Till Alran (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) crashed on the last section and placed 14th.

Before the finals session, Max Alran (Commencal/Muc-Off by Riding Addiction) had suffered a crash in the rock garden during his last practice. However, the Frenchman had the overall title at stake and needed a top five finish to secure it. Max Alran held his nerve and despite placing fourth his time was enough to secure the overall series title.

Final starter Vermette was not to be denied and posted an impressive winning time.

Following his win Vermette said: “I didn’t think it was going to be a that good of a run, I didn’t feel any quicker than yesterday (in qualifying).

“I was off-line in a few bits. I’ll have to watch my GoPro back, but it felt pretty good. I really wanted to get the win after not getting it last weekend at basically home in Lake Placid.

“It felt great. In the start gate my mindset was just to win. I wasn’t that worried about the overall as I knew it was going to be hard.

“I just tried to put down my best run. I’m stoked to go and battle with the elites next year.”

Max Alran took the overall series, finishing 12 points ahead of Vermette, while Waite placed third.

After winning the overall series Alran said: “This morning was pretty bad.

“On the last run of practice I crashed in the rock garden and dislocated my finger on the left hand, but it was not the worst.

“My wrist was already sore after crashing in Lenzerheide and it was just feeling better at Lake Placid and all the week. I crashed again and it hurt.

“I’m super stoked to make it to the bottom. We did it pretty good with fourth and to keep the overall. I just had to keep riding as I know and try to be safe.”

OSTGAARD FINISHES WITH DOUBLE AS ZIERL SEALS CROWN

Aletha Ostgaard (Canyon CLLCTV Factory Team) secured back-to-back victories in North America to finish the season on a high. Quickest qualifier Ostgaard also took victory in Lake Placid Olympic Region, New York, last weekend and was again triumphant following a well-paced run.

Meanwhile, Rosa Zierl (Cube Factory Racing) did enough to secure the overall series title with a third placed finish. Zierl qualified fourth quickest and knew that a top eight finish world secure the UCI Downhill World Champion the UCI World Cup series overall. The title was never in doubt for the 16-year-old who was quicker than those before her at every split and her time was enough for another podium finish.

Penultimate starter Eliana Hulsebosch (Santa Cruz Syndicate) threw down the gauntlet to her rivals with an aggressive top section in a search for her first UCI World Cup win of the campaign. The New Zealander held on to her early advantage and finished one second quicker than Zierl.

Final starter Ostgaard was in touch with Hulsebosch on the first two sections before building pace throughout her run. The American carried her speed and finished over a second clear of Hulsebosch in a winning time of 4:04.2.

Following her victory Ostgaard said: “I just gave it everything I had.

“This course is easy to make mistakes, but there is a lot of time to make it up. I just gave it everything, even though I had a scary moment.

“I kept pushing as hard I could. It was about pacing myself and not killing myself on the top section. Ellie (Hulsebosch) is so strong on the top section and she could muscle her way through it, that was really impressive.

“I know I can’t do that quite yet, I’m going to try. I just had to pace myself at the beginning and get faster during the run.”

With eight podium finishes in 10 rounds the consistency of Zierl was enough for her to clinch the overall UCI World Cup by 35 points, ahead of Ostgaard in second and Hulsebosch in third.

Women Junior UCI Downhill World Champion, Zierl said: “I just enjoyed riding my bike so much this season.

“With the wins, I was quite often on the podium. It was perfect. It’s even more of a confidence boost to know that I’m fast, but I still have to work a lot to get even faster.

“I’ll enjoy the first few weeks of the off-season before we start training again. It’s good to know how consistent I was.

“Also, for the World Championships that I could deliver on that one race too. I’m just super happy.”

ucimtbworldseries.com

DH World Series Overall Standings: Women’s Elite

#Rider / TeamTotal points
1Valentina HÖLL (AUT)YT MOB2139
2Gracey HEMSTREET (CAN)NORCO RACE DIVISION1727
3Tahnee SEAGRAVE (GBR)ORBEA / FMD RACING1604
4Nina HOFFMANN (GER)SANTA CRUZ SYNDICATE1282
5Marine CABIROU (FRA)CANYON CLLCTV FACTORY TEAM1280
6Camille BALANCHE (SUI)YETI / FOX FACTORY RACE TEAM1176
7Anna NEWKIRK (USA)FRAMEWORKS RACING / 5DEV737
8Sacha EARNEST (NZL)TREK FACTORY RACING DH660
9Phoebe GALE (GBR)ORBEA / FMD RACING630
10Jess BLEWITT (NZL)CUBE FACTORY RACING615

DH World Series Overall Standings: Men’s Elite

#Rider / TeamTotal points
1Jackson GOLDSTONE (CAN)SANTA CRUZ SYNDICATE1946
2Loic BRUNI (FRA)SPECIALIZED GRAVITY1768
3Luca SHAW (USA)CANYON CLLCTV FACTORY TEAM1366
4Loris VERGIER (FRA)COMMENCAL/MUC-OFF BY RIDING ADDICTION1199
5Amaury PIERRON (FRA)COMMENCAL/MUC-OFF BY RIDING ADDICTION1170
6Troy BROSNAN (AUS)CANYON CLLCTV FACTORY TEAM1018
7Andreas KOLB (AUT)YT MOB1002
8Oisin O CALLAGHAN (IRL)YT MOB888
9Ronan DUNNE (IRL)MONDRAKER FACTORY RACING DH848
10Luke MEIER-SMITH (AUS)GIANT FACTORY OFF-ROAD TEAM – DH826

How was it for you?

How many of y’all watched the racing live this year? From some deeply anecdotal ‘research’ (ie. our riding buddies) it seemed like not many folk renewed their subscription to Discovery+ once the price went up so massively.

Talking points then…

Belts eh? They didn’t seem to trouble the podiums much. Possibly more to do with racing being about riders rather than the bicycles.

Weight matters. But not lighter weight it seems. A whole swathe of riders adding weights to the bikes to make them up to 2kg heavier. A possible side effect of the racers riding e-bikes so much when training?

Vermette and the Alrans going up to Elite next year. Oof. Not to mention the rise of Henri Keifer who’s already in there.

The whole sorry YT saga. Hopefully the riders (Holl, O’Callaghan and Kolb) have secured spots on other teams for 2026. And kudos to the whole YT Mob race team itself for keeping on going (and stumping up their own cash to do so).

Next year’s Elite Women’s field is going to get even better. As well as the interest in what team Holl will end up, the resurgence of Seagrave, Cabirou and Nicole – combined with the impressive racing from the new Elite racers Hemstreet & Earnest – all makes for a fascinating field.

Like the race season itself, let’s end with Goldstone vs Bruni. It’s safe to say that no-one wanted the Overall to be decided with an injury (or crash, or mechanical) but it is a reminder that DH racing is a sport that is partly about crashing. Crashing was how Goldstone lost his seemingly unassailable mid-season win streak.

As well as crashes, DH racing is now very much about qualifying; it was Bruni’s superior qualifying that got him in the lead going into the final round. But to be honest, as with crashing, I don’t think many folk want to see the Overall title effectively won by the best qualifier. With a record-equalling total of 5 race wins it does feel right that Goldstone took the Overall, no matter how frustrating the final race day turned out to be.

Singletrack Weekly Word

Sports Newsletter of the Year finalist at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2024.
Find out why our newsletter is different and give it a go. Keep up to date and get our best editorial in your inbox.

185cm tall. 73kg weight. Orange Switch 6er. Saracen Ariel Eeber. Schwalbe Magic Mary. Maxxis DHR II. Coil fan.

More posts from Ben

37 thoughts on “Mont-Sainte-Anne DH World Series Rd10 results, highlight vids & talking points

  1. the post-quali, pre-race analysis from PB provides this breakdown:
    • Jackson Goldstone in 10th // Loic Bruni needs 30th or better• Jackson Goldstone in 9th // Loic Bruni needs 30th or better• Jackson Goldstone in 8th // Loic Bruni needs 30th or better• Jackson Goldstone in 7th // Loic Bruni needs 25th or better (26th for Bruni would provide enough points to tie Goldstone, Bruni would lose the tie-breaker)• Jackson Goldstone in 6th // Loic Bruni needs 18th or better• Jackson Goldstone in 5th // Loic Bruni needs 11th or better (12th for Bruni would provide enough points to tie Goldstone, Bruni would lose the tie-breaker)• Jackson Goldstone in 4th // Loic Bruni needs 8th or better• Jackson Goldstone in 3rd // Loic Bruni needs 7th or better• Jackson Goldstone in 2nd // Loic Bruni needs 5th or better• Jackson Goldstone in 1st // Loic Bruni needs 3rd or better
    So my reading of that is prior to the racers heading up or their finals run, there is the scenario where Jackson is in 8th, 9th or 10th where Loic requires only the points from last place. (and once they had started, from 29th as Daprela DNF’d). Thats worth the trip up the gondola at least, and contemplating the most painful 2.5km walk/scoot of his life if it gets him the overall victory. Or could have been a bluff and he had no ability to even take the start ramp – but a situation only possible as he had beaten Jackson in qualifying.
    Jackson in 7th required a 25th, meaning beating Dunne who I think rode the bottom third on the rim to end up less than 30 seconds back – unlikely from Loic who could barely walk and didn’t warm up.
    Tuhoto in 24th was only 12 seconds off the win, just to give perspective on the “could have taken a chill run to finish midpack" comments
     

  2. XC ignored yet again……on a supposed MTB website. And success for British riders…….with Evie winning the XCC Overall, and Charlie joining a small band of British riders to win a XCO World Cup………
    Looking at the Juniors & U23, there’s not a lot coming up behind the current Elite riders, which is worrying. Get your arses in gear British Cycling……..


  3. XC ignored yet again……on a supposed MTB website. And success for British riders…….with Evie winning the XCC Overall, and Charlie joining a small band of British riders to win a XCO World Cup………
    Looking at the Juniors & U23, there’s not a lot coming up behind the current Elite riders, which is worrying. Get your arses in gear British Cycling……..

     
    why not start a thread on the XC ? I mean a thread title with downhill results is going to focus on that. 
    back to the DH, Kolb being pipped to second by 0.001 seconds has to be gutted 
     

  4. Bruni hasn’t done anything wrong, silly if people are giving him stick.
    great entertainment, the order of riders was interesting after mixed qualifying.
     
    thought it also showed what a long and brutal season it’s been with some big names not getting the results (on the day and during the season) they would have expected. 
    gutted for Pierron too, was on a great run. 

  5. Bruno was just playing the game. Absolutely nothing wrong with that, as the breakdown from PB above shows. 

    Do we know why LB didn’t make the podium for the overall? Probably mentioned somewhere but I’ve not seen off so.

    A post purporting to be from Finn said he was in hospital. Obviously lots to be said about choice to go then Vs ability to stand at the start line, but…
    TBH that’s the bit I’m not impressed with. Feels more than a little disingenuous.
     

  6. The hate brunis copped for this is ridiculous. 

    Yeah, Loic has shown again and again that he’s super-competitive but also respectful and wants fair play. A consummate pro who loves the sport. He definitely deserves the benefit of the doubt and I’m sure most racers would have been up there on the off-chance that JG had a ‘mare and they could roll down to take the overall.
    I like Loic more than Jackson, but definitely wanted JG to win after his four-in-a-row stint this season (and Bruni’s won plenty before).
    The right result, in the wrong circumstances. Just hope Loic recovers well and is still racing against Max and Asa as well next season. It’s gonna be even more exciting.
     

  7. Slightly off topic but mentioned already, Kolb to the syndicate has now been announced. Not sure how long Greenland is tied in for or whether he will be on the move? 

  8. I’m actually surprised the response here has been so pro Loic. Obviously we have no insight into what actually happened, but I think it’s a shocking show of sportsmanship. My interpretation is that he went to warm up with no intention of dropping in unless Jackson puts in a time Loic could beat cruising e.g. crashes but finishes. He’s purely there to give the illusion he’s fine so that Jackson has to go for a win it or bin it run.
     
    After Jackson put down that run I think he should have at least have had the decency to roll down then shake Jackson’s hand and say “I can’t match that today, well done".
    If Jackson had crashed during his run it would have left a pretty sour taste.


  9. I’m actually surprised the response here has been so pro Loic. Obviously we have no insight into what actually happened, but I think it’s a shocking show of sportsmanship. My interpretation is that he went to warm up with no intention of dropping in unless Jackson puts in a time Loic could beat cruising e.g. crashes but finishes. He’s purely there to give the illusion he’s fine so that Jackson has to go for a win it or bin it run.

    Yup, and exactly what he should have done. Someone made a good analogy from Drag Racing where an injured car will ALWAYS line up and give the impression it’s going, if the person red-lights, or crosses, it’s a win for the injured car. 
    We’ve seen it loads with football where they still give the impression a player is playing until the last opportunity… 
    Why would you not make him ride ? 
    But even if Bruni bailed and told everyone, Jackson STILL had to ride it and get down respectably to win the overall. 
    But trust me, Bruni couldn’t ‘cruise’ down for anything other than P29. If you’re not FULLY on it there, you’re dropping a tonne of seconds, so so quickly…. If JAckson had gone P10, Bruni still wasn’t dropping in.
     

  10. Slightly off topic but mentioned already, Kolb to the syndicate has now been announced. Not sure how long Greenland is tied in for or whether he will be on the move? 

    Sadly, if we’re of the opinion that this is hard-nosed professional sport then Greenland probably won’t be offered another contract with SC. We all know he’s had illness issues and, TBF to SC, they have stuck by their man through it. But based on results he’s on thin ice. I’m told he’s a lovely lad and he certainly had the pace and style pre-illness. But the law of the jungle is inherent in pro sport. The other problem is that the F1-isation of World Cup DH means he’s possibly in danger of dropping out of the elite level.
     
    I hope not. He’s a cracking rider to watch.
     

  11. This was Greenland’s 4th season on the Syndicate. I’d be very surprised if he was locked in for any longer than that. He only qualified 4 times in 2025. Best result was a 5th. Also his younger team mate is basically the Bruce Lee of mountain biking and the hottest property in the game.
    Yeah, negotiations will be pretty grim this time around.

  12. My knowledge of drag racing ends with The Fast and The Furious so I’m not sure where the parallels to downhill lie. Is Loic the cop or vin diesel?
    My point is that the image of downhill is not one of ruthless competitiveness… riders celebrating each other’s victory (which I often think is insincere but now the done thing and Vali gets an unfair reputation of being a sore loser for not doing it…), riders from opposing teams practicing lines together, rivals training together between races, the crying about 5 man podiums. To me this is a sport trying to sell itself as being part of the MTB community rather than hyper elite like road racing 

  13. Just started on the dwontime podcast, valid comment from Neko that it is so impressive that one of the riders most in the spotlight of both media and fans has a huge crash in last practise, but manages to conceal that he could barely walk for hours – an impressive feat from him and Specialised Gravity that he didn’t think many teams would be able to pull off.


  14. My point is that the image of downhill is not one of ruthless competitiveness…

    There are still a few outliers but DH is now fully almost 100% ruthless professionals.  The jump in riding standards over the last few years should tell you all you need to know. (although Ronan Dunne seems to be steadfastly refusing to do any media training which is why he is my current favourite rider).
    Like weeksy said, if Jackson had finished 10th or lower Loic could have rolled down to finish in 29th and won the overall.  It would have been insanity to not line up at the top with those odds.
    And lets not forget, the reason Loic was able to play this game was because he qualified in 1st.  I think that earned him the right to play the tactics any way he wanted to.


  15. Does drinking and mentioning Red Bull non-stop until they gave him a hat not count?

    I don’t know.  If I drank and mentioned Red Bull non-stop they would give me a hat?
    I can do that without any media training.

  16. Redbull marketing and their whole business strategy is a strange world. 
    Rampage this weekend – look out for RB athletes being given a finish line can by the most gorgeous model they could find, and the others begrudgingly handed a plain water bottle by a bored looking crew member in a headset.

Comments are closed.

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!