Australian Mountain Bike

ALL EYES ON QUEENSLAND

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How much top class mountain bike action can one State cope with? Well, the excitement is going OTT in QLD as it gears up to host the World Championsh­ips, Crocodile Trophy AND Commonweal­th Games in quick succession over the next 12 months.

One world-class mountain bike race in an Aussie State is fantastic and having two in the space of six months would be amazing. But Queensland is going one better by hosting three top events in quick succession to make riders and fans alike go giddy with excitement.

First up is the UCI Mountain Bike World Championsh­ips in Cairns at the start of September when the best from around the globe will attempt to follow in the footsteps of the likes of Nino Schurter, Julien Absalon, Aaron Gwin, Loic Bruni and Danny Hart. Just a week later, the brutal Crocodile Trophy sets off from the same city with riders facing more than 24 hours in the saddle over eight days before the welcome sight of the finish line at Port Douglas. And - as if that was not enough - mountain bike fans will again be able to see a host of top cross country stars in action when the Commonweal­th Games comes to the Gold Coast next April.

WORLD CHAMPIONSH­IPS

It’s 21 years since Cairns put itself on the mountain bike map by hosting the 1996 World Championsh­ips – and now they are back again! The Smithfield course, adjacent to the James Cook University on the northern outskirts of the city, has been upgraded to make it even tougher as more than 300 riders from 35 nations across the globe battle for honours. On the downhill track – well known for its high speed stutters, monster ridge-line jumps and tight technical drops - the Rock Garden section is expected to be extended. The Corkscrew, Mick’s Drop and Whoop section have all been tweaked and speed generators will be inserted into the final long straight. For XCO, although the course is comparativ­ely short, it’s also one of the most challengin­g as it weaves its way through steep gumtree lined ridges and dark rainforest valleys. This year riders will have to get even more technical after changes to the Python steps, while fans will be able to get a real close view at the Crusher due to a new spectator area. As if that was not enough, the Croc Slide, Jacobs Ladder and Caterpilla­r sections are all likely to be adjusted and magnified to make it possibly one of the most exciting championsh­ips ever. Of course, the weather could also play a huge part in proceeding­s, highlighte­d back in 2014 when April rain ahead of a World Cup event made the jungle surface greasy as hell and caused some real wet and wild racing. And British rider Adam Brayton will testify how dangerous it can get in Cairns after he needed 18 stitches in a sickening leg wound after smashing into a tree that year (and then seeing a fan try – and fail – to complete the rest of the course on his stricken bike!). It was much more dry and dusty for the most recent World Cup event in 2016, when Nino Schurter proved his class with a superb XCO victory. And the Swiss star is highly likely to be fighting for the men’s world title in September, along with arch-rival Julien Absalon. The downhill race is much harder to predict. Loic Bruni triumphed on the Smithfield course in the 2016 World Cup, before Brit Danny Hart won three successive events at the end of last season to prove he’s got a real chance. Aussie fans will be hoping Troy Brosnan can get himself in the mix, while Mick Hannah is always capable of pulling something special out of the bag seemingly from nowhere. In the women’s races, awesome Rachel Atherton will be a red-hot favourite to take the downhill title back to England after winning every single World Cup race in 2016, but hometown hero Tracey Hannah is likely to push her all the way – especially with thousands of fans cheering her on. Bec Henderson will hope to challenge in the competitiv­e cross country event, with Annika Langvad, Jolanda Neff and Jenny Rissveds also expected to be in contention.

COMMONWEAL­TH GAMES

Mountain bikers will be among the 5,000 athletes competing for gold medals on the Gold Coast in 2018.

The cross-country version of the sport will be making its fourth outing at the Games, having also featured in 2002 (Manchester), 2006 (Melbourne) and 2014 (Glasgow). Australian­s struggled to make much impact on the event until Dan McConnell and Bec

Henderson returned from Scotland with a bronze medal each and they will be aiming to go even better in front of what are bound to be passionate supporters on home soil. But McConnell will have another tough battle against New Zealand duo Sam Gaze and Anton Cooper, whil Henderson’s main challenger is likely to be Canada’s Emily Batty.

The Games course is situated at the Nerang National Park and has been built by Simon French’s renowned track company Dirt Air at a cost of $3.2m and opened to the public in February. Former world champion Nathan Rennie was also heavily involved in the design and constructi­on, so you know it’s going to be a real beauty.

Competitor­s can expect a complete challenge with the course featuring tough climbs, stone stairs and ledges, technical rocky sections, tricky descents, large berms and rollers, as well as some pure flow.

Organisers have promised that fans attending will be as close to all the action as possible, not just in and around the start/finish area at the newly refurbishe­d Gold Coast Velodrome, but also deep out on the three racing loops as well. And regular riders can test themselves on the Commonweal­th course right now by heading to the venue and taking on the exact trails that will determine who claims gold.

CROCODILE TROPHY

The gruelling Crocodile Trophy has been called the Tour de France for mountain bikes and its founder Gerhard Schönbache­r should know since he twice finished last overall in Le Tour when he was a pro road racer.

The 2017 edition features eight stages for 650km of riding, an astounding 13,000m of total elevation and takes competitor­s from Cairns to Port Douglas into world heritage rainforest­s, across fast-flowing creeks and deep rivers, out to authentic outback cattle stations and then up through the spectacula­r Kuranda National Park.

Last year’s male winner – Urs Huber from Switzerlan­d – was in the saddle for close to 24 hours in total but other riders took almost double the time to complete the energy-sapping event. Despite its fierce reputation, or maybe because of it, riders flock from across the globe to take on the challenge with Danish, Portuguese, Austrian, Belgian, Dutch, British, Swiss, Japanese, German and Italian entrants already confirmed for September’s race.

And they can consider themselves lucky in a way given the fact the very first Crocodile Trophy (run in 1995 from Darwin to Cairns when Schönbache­r realised he could not host a race in Vietnam as he initially hoped) lasted for 17 stages and was a mind-boggling 2,556km in total distance!

Despite the reduction in kms, the Croc is still widely regarded as one of the toughest mountain bike events on the planet and yet another reason why Queensland, with its amazing varied geography, is ranked as one of the top locations to ride.

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