Let’s check in with Connor Fearon as he gives us the Inside Info on World Cup number 1 for 2014! Over to Mr Worldwide himself:
Last time I raced here I finished in the 60’s with a good run and that was my worst World Cup result ever. I’ve trained hard this off season to change all that. I was excited for the season to start and get back into racing with my new team mate Andrew Crimmins. As far as the team goes not much has changed. I still have my trusty mechanic Dupelle working on the Kona. Matty had already set my bike up with an air shock and single ply tyres to help bring the weight down to move along the pedal a bit faster. The track walk showed a lot of changes the track builders have made since I was here in 2012. A lot of the top section had been diverted and remade with the inclusion of a few very technical rock gardens. Apart from that the track was the same with the lung burning pedal and 4x style bottom third. My first few runs made me realise how hard the top section was going to be now with the added rock gardens. Everybody on trail bikes looked like they were struggling a bit. I opted to put my coil shock and downhill casing tyres back on. My plan was to make as much time at the top half and figure out the pedal section when I get to it. Unfortunately my team mate Andrew Crimmins crashes badly on the first practice day and broke his kneecap in half… He’ll be back eventually and will get to the top step I’m sure.
Qualifying was good. I put a solid run down and pushed hard through the technical sections. I qualified 26th. I really want to stay in the top 20 this year, statistically this is my worst track but it made no difference to my expectations. With racing on Saturday there was no practice day after qualifying, just a short session before racing. I made a few changes to my lines in some sections that would help me go faster. My race run was really good only some minor issues at the top and set my lungs on fire throughout the whole pedal section. Overall it was pretty good. I finished in 25th, to be honest I’m a little disappointed and I expected better of myself this season. After looking at the split times I was happy with my effort on the pedal. I was 18th at the last split then went back from there… Now my focus is on the cairns World Cup in a week where I really want to be up there in the results. Thanks to my sponsors for making this season possible- Kona, Fox Head, Maxxis, Giro Shoes, SRAM, Rock Shox, Avid, Yakima racks and Breese High Performance.
Next stop for the world cup is no where other than Cairns Australia!
The first world cup for season 2014 is done and dusted, this finals report from South Africa also happens to be the 300th article up on downhill247.com happy days all round! The crowds came out and lined the track with most down towards the bottom section where riders had to it big jumps after 3.5 minutes of flat out pedalling and exhaustion further up the track. The day kicked off with the junior classes, whilst it is great the juniors get recognised in their own category it means they don’t feature on the live broadcast. So if you’re not lucky enough to be trackside you can’t see just how fast these riders are going and believe us they are flying!
It was young American Luca Shaw who took the victory and the overall leaders jersey followed by Loris Vergier and in third Amaury Pierron. For the Aussie contingent it was AidenVarley in fourth who got everyone back home in Australia off their seats! Aiden matched his qualifying position, a great result for Aiden.
Junior Men
1. Luca Shaw 4:15.267
2. Loris Vergier 4:17.257
3. Amaury Pierron 4:23.668
4. Aiden Varley 4:27.376
5. Benjamin Boutie 4:29.731
Next up we saw the women divisions hit the course, there were three Aussies to watch out for, one junior and two senior riders. By default as the only junior rider to line up and take on the track here in South Africa Tegan Molloy claims the overall leaders jersey. Her race run didn’t quite goes as planned with a crash in the rock garden but she dusted herself off and finished her run. Moving onto seniors and Danielle Beecroft just missed a top ten in 11th place. The best Aussie result goes to Tracey Hannah in 6th place, no doubt she will be looking to do a lot better than that in Cairns in 2 weeks.
In the end a fresh new face grabbed her first world cup victory, after a successful transition from juniors Mannon Carpenter showed that she has made the jump and is now a contender in seniors too. Rachel Atherton did well to beat her sickness into second place and Jill Kintner put her 4X/BMX background to good use to take 3rd.
Senior Women
1. Manon Carpenter 4:34.923
2. Rachel Atherton 4:38.831
3. Jill Kintner 4:44.041
4. Myriam Nicole 4:44.651
5. Emmeline Ragot 4:44.662
6. Tracey Hannah 4:48.045
7. Tahnee Seagrave 4:52.285
8. Morgane Charre 4:52.400
9. Emilie Siegenthaler 4:58.117
10. Fionn Griffiths 5:00.973
The last class of the day Senior Men, with 80 riders battling it out it was set to be a good afternoon and it didn’t disappoint! We watched the Green To Gold team race their first Senior Men’s race, with Chris Barlin and Brent Smith finishing 68th and 65th respectively it was a successful debut. Dean Lucas cracked the top 50 in 49th with Jack Moir a few positions ahead in 46th, finishing just ahead of Jack was second fastest qualifier Josh Bryceland who lost his chain and couldn’t pedal, he ended up a not too shabby 43rd. Brook MacDonald and Brendan Fairclough have had better days in the office with 35th and 37th placed finishes respectively. Nick Beer crashed aboard his custom Devinci and finished 29th one place ahead of Danny Hart in 28th.
Moving up the results we see Connor Fearon in 25th, a solid result and as usual we will have his Inside Info for you all – watch this space! Bryn Atkinson was less than 0.5 of a second ahead in 23rd, with such close times a second could easily move you up 5 positions.
Home town rider Andrew Neethling was 17th one place behind Steve Peat, an honourable mention to Cam Cole in 12th who is a coming back from a A�nasty run of injuries but showing he still has it. Whilst South Africa has never been his strongest track we were surprised to see Gee in 10th, not a bad result but after 2013 double digit results are rare! One place ahead and the highest flat pedal finisher was Sam Hill. By this stage it was still Mic Hannah who was in the hotseat as he came down earlier on in the day, with a lot of heavyweights not getting close to his time it looked like this might finally be his day… The young guns of Loic Bruni, Troy Brosnan and Sam Blenkinsop couldn’t displace him and finished 4th, 5th and 6th respectively. Greg Minnaar, arguably the danger man here for Hannah came down and looked fast but even with the crowd egging him on couldn’t knock Mic out of the seat. Had he finally done it, with just one rider to come Mic was still on the hot seat. Aaron Gwin was up at the first split and the second and as he blasted into the finish area he was up there too. Proving a point to his doubters Gwin is back, Mic finished second, so close! We are sure Mic will get one back next round in Cairns.
What a race and it answered many questions but created a few new ones too! Will Gwin be unstoppable? Can Mic use this to win in Cairns? Will Stevie Smith be back in time to shake things up? Will a young Aussie such as Connor or Troy bring something exceptional out of the bag and show the world how Aussies ride on home soil?
Senior Men
1. Aaron Gwin 3:59.344
2. Mick Hannah 4:01.381
3. Greg Minnaar 4:02.168
4. Loic Bruni 4:02.237
5. Troy Brosnan 4:02.675
6. Samuel Blenkinsop 4:03.387
7. Sam Dale 4:05.347
8. Neko Mulally 4:05.705
9. Sam Hill 4:06.195
10. Gee Atherton 4:06.243
Tune in for Cairns where we will be going all out for our home world cup, Aussie Aussie Aussie!
Before then there is still plenty coming up on the site.
Well, well, well,who picked that? Results from qualifying here in South Africa are complete and there is definitely a few eye brows being raised in the pits. Aaron Gwin showed everyone he is back finishing some 2.5 seconds ahead of Josh Bryceland, who has been training hard during the off season. Fellow teammate and pre-race favourite Greg Minnaar was in position 3 just 0.1 behind Josh, it was then a Lapierre double with Loic Bruni (how fast is this kid) and Sam Blenkinsop rounding out the top 5.
In 6th place was Australia’s own Troy Brosnan, the next Aussie was Sam Hill in 9th place, a bit of a gap back to Bryn Atkinson in 23rd. Bryn spent some time in the local hospital after a concussion during practice but got the all clear from the quacks to suit up and race, fortunately he did as all the points riders can get for the overall are super valuable. Connor Fearon was a few spots back in 26th place and ready to pull the trigger on Saturday (for this race the finals are on Saturday instead of the usual Sunday). In his first senior men’s world cup Dean Lucas grabbed a super respective 41st. With only a few weeks on his new bike Jack Moir was 52nd, watch out for Jack this year as his speed improves. In their first world cup Green to Gold racing had all their riders qualify, Brent Smith in 62nd and Chris Barlin 74th (their female rider Danielle Beecroft also qualified). The biggest surprise was Mich Hannah in 92nd, having a moment on the track, possibly related to a mechanical but being a protected rider he will still ride finals despite finishing out of the top 80.
Looking at some of the other results Gee Atherton crashed and tumbled down the results to 15th (see what we did there!). Brendan Fairclough rode his trail bike to 28th and Brook Macdonald crashed finishing 66th.
In the women’s race Manon Carpenter showed she means business, first place by over 9 seconds ahead of Rachel Atherton who had to take her IV drip out to go to the track! Emmeline Ragot was thrid, Tracey Hannah fifth. We saw Danielle Beecroft in 13th at her first senior race. Junior Tegan Molloy was 16th and will give her more confidence as her experience increases.
Junior men was taken out by American Luca Shaw, Loris Vergier was second and Taylor Vernon third, these names might not be common place but as the season continues and the years roll on it’s the juniors who will be making inroads tot he senior classes. One name you should recognise in fourth is Aiden Varley! Riding well we would love to see Aiden crack the top 3 this weekend, fingers crossed!
Racing will be taking place on Saturday so check back soon for all the action.
Practice is done for the day here in South Africa, an interesting day, there were still a few trail style bikes kicking around under riders but there were a lot more ‘light’ downhill bikes. Specialized, Devinci, Chain Reaction just to name a few were all getting around on beefed up trail style bikes, so less travel than full on downhill bikes but more beefy than regular trail bikes. Riders were sporting triple clamp forks to deal with the new rock additions.
Disappointing times for the Kona team with junior rider Andrew Crimmins out after crashing in the ‘Money Maker’ A�section of the track, the crash leaving his knee cap in two pieces… Now on his way back to Australia the world champs in Norway will become his focus. A real shame as he has the potential to mix it up in the juniors with anyone. He wasn’t the only rider to succumb to the track here in Pietermaritzburg, Innes Graham went down and broke his ankle or foot. We also saw Bryn Atkinson eat dirt but not sure how he pulled up afterwards, hopefully fine!
Tomorrow sees qualifying and a true indication of who has been training hard in the off season, catch you soon!
World cups are back! The 2014 season has kicked off in South Africa, home of the 2013 World Championships and Downhill247 as always is bringing you all the action! Today was the track walk day, a chance for riders to check out the track and see any changes. Having been on the circuit for a few years now most riders knew where the track would go but what they weren’t expecting was what was in their way, rocks! The course builders have been busy adding big rocks to make it a ‘proper’ downhill track, this raises the question, medium bike or full size downhill rig? Check out some of the antics from the walk below, it looks casual but believe us things are going to get serious real quick here in Pietermaritzburg!
Now we are keener than ever for the bikes to be rolled out and practice to get underway! Check back soon as we bring you all the action from practice.
What a day here in South Africa, the Juniors had their runs to determine who take the crown of Junior World Champ, if you were in Australia watching the UCI’s live timing we bet a white screen has never been so exciting! The atmosphere was slightly different in South Africa, there was a lot of nerves but being a Friday the crowd numbers weren’t as high as if it were a weekend.
After the Junior Female class it was time for Junior Males, there would be around 50 riders all trying to claim the stripes, with Australia fielding such a large team we had riders set off early and this saw the likes of Ben Hill taking the hot seat early on. Fortunately mechanicals or crashes didn’t factor into the results, all the Aussies got down without succumbing to anything other than dust and having to pedal flat out!
As we got to the pointy end of proceedings it was Noel Niederberger from Switzerland in the hot seat, Noel had been riding well all year in the World Cups and looked to have put in the time to beat. Thomas Crimmins came down and just missed out on the top spot, finishing a super strong 8th place. Dean Lucas was on course andA�all the AustraliansA�really got nervous, Dean was just down at the first split, by less than half a second, we knew how bad Dean wanted this so there was no reason to be concerned about that time gap. As Dean powered to the line he went into second place, with a few riders still to come it was now no longer up to Dean to determine his final position. Three more riders would determine Dean’s position, on any given day any of these riders could take the victory, Michael Jones from Great Britain just bested Noels time. Fastest rider during timed practice Loris Vergier put nearly two seconds into Michael’s time, showing his fastest practice run was no fluke. There was only one rider left on the hill, Richie Rude Jr, all year Richie has been competing at the World Cups but in the Elite class so everyone knew he was going to be the one to watch our for. Last year he finished second to Loic Bruni but this year he put in an amazing run to take the victory. From the first split everyone knew it would take a mechanical or a crash to stop him, he went on to power home by over five and a half seconds! The track suiting the big powerhouse from the USA and pushing Dean into fifth place.
Junior Female:
2. Danielle Beecroft + 7.512
3. Tegan Molloy + 19.448
Junior Male:
5. Dean Lucas + 8.908
8. Thomas Crimmins + 14.101
16. Aiden Varley
17. Peter Knott
24. Ben Hill
26. Luke Ellison
28. Brent Smith
Of course there was also practice for the Elite guys going on, the big news from South Africa is the weather has drastically changed, getting a lot cooler and the threat of rain now looks real.
There are two half an hour practice sessions (yes half an hour!) sessions left before finals on Sunday, the weather may have the biggest say in the results we will just have to wait and see!