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May 8, 2022
MTB World Cup 2022 WE – 3 – Albstadt – XCO
The UCI Mountain Bike World Cup is a multi-round mountain bike racing series that is sanctioned by the Union Cycliste Internationale.
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May 8, 2022
MTB World Cup 2022 WE – 3 – Albstadt – XCO
The UCI Mountain Bike World Cup is a multi-round mountain bike racing series that is sanctioned by the Union Cycliste Internationale. The first World Cup series – which was composed of cross-country events – was held in 1989. The Downhill World Cup was inaugurated two years later, and the Dual Slalom World Cup was launched in 1998. The dual-slalom format – which involved knock-out heats with two riders on the parallel courses in each heat – evolved into four-cross (with four riders on a single course per heat) in 2002 before being dropped after the 2011 season. Riders win points according to their placing in each event. The reigning series leaders in each class are identified by a special jersey.
Rebecca McConnell (Primaflora Mondraker Genuins) became only the fifth woman ever to have a perfect World Cup weekend on Sunday – winning the cross-country (XCO) after a victory in the Short Track (XCC) on Friday. McConnell dominated Round 2 of the XCO in Albstadt, Germany, for her second straight World Cup win, solidifying her lead in the overall standings. 2016 Olympic champion Jenny Rissveds (Team 31 Ibis Cycles) took second, the only rider to finish within a minute of the Australian champion.
The Albstadt circuit is unrelenting, with long steep climbs and technical descents. There is nowhere to hide, and when McConnell attacked on the start lap, only Rissveds was able to respond. By the mid-point of the first of five full laps, the pair had over 30 seconds on a chase group of eight, which included last year’s Albstadt winner Loana Lecomte (Canyon CLLCTV), Alessandra Keller (Thomus Maxon), current Olympic Champion Jolanda Neff (Trek Factory) and XCC World Cup leader Pauline Ferrand Prevot (BMC MTB).
The leaders would ride together steadily over the next few laps while the chase whittled down to Lecomte, Ferrand Prevot, Keller and Mona Mitterwallner (Cannondale Factory), the under-23 rider who is riding up a category. Ferrand Prevot would fade in the last two laps to finish seventh, while Mitterwallner dropped Lecomte on the last lap to take third.
Rissveds tried an attack on one of the climbs on lap 3, but McConnell quickly responded, and then the Australian launched her own attack the next lap and her Swedish rival had no answer. McConnell’s fourth lap split matched the fastest lap of the race (Rissveds in lap 1), and the World Cup leader put in another sub-14 minute lap for the fifth and final circuit, eventually pulling away to win by 48 seconds.
McConnell has now opened a commanding lead in the overall World Cup standings after two rounds with 620 points. Anne Terpstra (Ghost Factory) is a distant second at 373 points, with Mitterwallner jumping to third from fifth, a further 16 points back.
“Jenny and I have very different strengths,” explained MConnell, “so she can play games a bit more and I need a consistent speed throughout the race. I knew she was playing with me, so I was just trying to be patient, but after [the start of lap 4] I knew I had to give it a shot. When I made my move, I was able to make it stick.
“It’s just incredible … there’s no words for this. Today the plan was just enjoy every moment for today … whether it went really bad or really good. Just enjoy this moment wearing the leader’s jersey with number 1 on the front of the bike. The goal remains the same – race well, no expectations.”
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