More than 5 thousand visitors attended the Mercedes-Benz UCI Mountain Bike World Cup in Lošinj

ore than 5 thousands visitors attended the extreme world cycling competition in Veli Lošinj from 19 to 22 April 2018 - the Mercedes-Benz UCI Mountain Bike World Cup in Losinj!
After a number of training sessions, a short but demanding and heavy Veli Lošinj trail have passed 215 top world competitors. Frenchman Myriam Nicholas and Aaron Gwin from the United States are the winners of the Mercedes-Benz UCI Mountain Bike World Cup Los Angeles in Men and Woman Elite categories. In Junior Men, the fastest was French Thibaut Daprela and in Junior Woman Austria, Valentina Holl. The Santa cruz syndicate (USA) was awarded with the Team of the Day award.

Lošinj in Croatia was one of the rarest of things in downhill racing; an unknown quantity. The top flight of international racing has trodden a familiar path around the world for the vast majority of the modern era and tends to stick to a group of familiar hillsides. Many talked the track nestled amid the Adriatic archipelago down; it was set to be the shortest of the year and pre-race head cam footage appeared to reveal a straight-forward charge through a rock-littered wood before an urban push for the line. But no sooner had the UCI World Cup circus reassembled for the new season than they were proven wrong. The brutal rocks were in places axle deep, speeds were high and navigating swiftly to the bottom required traversing a series of drops and gap jumps with laser accuracy. 
Right from the start, it felt like a race which may just surprise. In the elite men’s timed training, Brook Macdonald, newly-rejuvenated and back on the team and bike which he had ridden on to his debut and as yet only World Cup victory back in 2012 topped the time sheets. He would go on to repeat the trick in qualifying and looked for all the world like making it a double.
In the women’s race the open book of 2017 seemed to remain open; any one of the top four of Myriam Nicole, Tahnée Seagrave, Tracey Hannah and Rachel Atherton looked capable of taking the win. It was Atherton, still very much on the comeback trail after an injury-blighted 2017, who drew first blood in qualifying. Nicole admitted to an untidy run however and conceded that changes remained to be made to her high-pivot Commencal bike. 
Come racing and the champ proved her calibre by setting a scorching time. Hannah had crashed on track and it has eclipsed that set by Seagrave. Only Atherton stood in her way but the vastly experienced Briton couldn’t stop Nicole. Nicole took the win ahead of Atherton and Seagrave with the French pairing of Marine Cabirou and the Enduro World Series champion, Cecile Ravanel rounding out the podium.
In the men’s race, the drama continued. Brook Macdonald’s wild style saw him pushing to the very limits of adhesion and tragically for him, he pushed past them. He crashed at the end of the high speed drop section and after being attended to by the trackside medical crew, rolled down to commiserate with his fans. American, Dakotah Norton, pulled off a remarkably long stint in the hot seat and would finish the day a career best fifth just behind a resurgent Sam Blenkinsop who many had seen as one of the pre-race danger men. 
Third place went to the last man down the hill, Australia’s Dean Lucas whilst second went to 21 year-old American, Luca Shaw. The Santa Cruz Syndicate rider was over the moon with a career best finish at the end of a weekend where he had just gone faster and faster in every session.
There would be no stopping Aaron Gwin however. Going for a record sixth career title and an unheard of four in a row, the Californian set about the rocks of Croatia with gusto. His lower section seemed scrappy but the damage was done long before he got there as he went about his now customary business of making the rowdy look calm and controlled. Gwin now has an aura of the other worldly; no matter where he qualifies, regardless of what he has done over the course of a weekend, he has a different gear come race day. It was a gear he had hooked up in Fort William last year before a freak crash saw him hit the deck and miss out on the win. You can bet that it has long been filed under ‘unfinished business’ and he’ll be out for revenge when the series makes it’s annual pilgrimage to the Scottish Highlands in six weeks time.

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