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July 2/21 14:38 pm - Ferrand Prevot & Flueckiger Win Les Gets Short Tracks


Posted by Editoress on 07/2/21
 

After a break of nearly a month, the Mountain Bike World Cup resumed this weekend in Les Gets, France, for Round 4, the final major event before the Olympics in approximately three weeks time. Competition began on Friday evening with the 20 minute Short Track (XCC), with world champion Pauline Ferrand Prevot (Absolute-Absalon-BMC) taking the women's win before a home French crowd. Men's World Cup leader Mathias Flueckiger (Thomas RN Swiss Bike) extended his lead in the men's series with his second consecutive XCC victory.

Sandra Walter (Liv Canada) was the top Canadian rider for the day, finishing 15th in the women's race, despite being delayed by a crash on the first lap. She will start on the second row for Sunday's XCO. In the men's race, Leandre Bouchard (Pivot-OTE) came back from a poor start that saw him in the 30s to finish 23rd for a third row start on Sunday.

 

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"I'm really happy with my result," said Walter. "When I got caught behind the slowdown right off the start, I thought I'd just spend the following 20 minutes chasing, but I dug in and suddenly I was in the 20s and catching riders on the climbs. That's when I realized I actually had good legs and was even more motivated. I'm excited to start second row on Sunday!"

 

"I did a good effort on the start track," said Bouchard. "I stayed calm after an unlucky start and made my way back. Mostly after halfway point I was able to ramp up my pace. Great to be back on World Cup with good feeling."

Unlike earlier rounds that were dominated by climbing, the one kilometre Les Gets circuit provided a mix of climbing, switchback descending and technical rock sections. This kept the races very tight until the final few laps.

The women's race was controlled in the early laps by 2016 Olympic champion Jenny Rissveds (Sweden), who set a hard enough tempo on the early climbing of each lap that others were content to follow. Ferrand Prevot, World Cup leader Loana Lecomte (Massi), Linda Indergand (Liv Factory) and Sina Frei (Specialized) all jockeyed for position behind Rissveds, but no one made a serious attempt to attack and open a gap. It wasn't until the final lap that Ferrand Prevot launched a strong effort on the climb and Rissveds was unable to respond. Frei also went by the fading Swedish rider to take second. Lecomte, winner of the previous round of the XCC, faded to finish 12th but retains the overall lead. Ferrand Prevot remains second, but has closed the gap slightly in the standings.

 

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"It was a tough race and also a technical one," said Ferrand Prevot. "I wanted to stay as much as possible at the front of the race, but I didn't want to take the lead because we had a headwind at the finish line. When Jenny attacked with two laps to go I could follow her, and on the last lap I knew I could attack. After that I had a little gap and I just had to manage the rocks. I'm happy because I am feeling better and better, as we get closer to the Olympics."

Canada had five women in the XCC, led by Walter's 15th. Catharine Pendrel (Clif Pro) was also caught by the crash but recovered to 22nd, for a third row start on Sunday. Jennifer Jackson (Norco Factory), just missed a called up, finishing 25th, while Emily Batty (Canyon Collective Factory) faded in the second half of the race to finish 33rd. Haley Smith (Norco Factory), who was caught by the crash, did not finish.

Although Round 1 and 2 XCC winner Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) is busy defending the Yellow Jersey at the Tour de France, the men's race did see the return of his rival Tom Pidcock (Ineos Grenadier). Pidcock won Round 2 of the XCO, but then broke his collarbone in a training accident, missing Round 3. This was his first mountain bike race since late May.

Anton Cooper (Trek Factory) took the early lead, followed by world champion and local favourite Jordan Sarrou (Specialized), European champion Nino Schurter (Scott-SRAM), Ondrej Cink (Kross Orlen) and Flueckiger. While all of these riders launched attacks, no one could get a gap, with Cink spending the most time on the front. Pidcock gradually moved his way up to fourth before making a mistake on Lap 6, overlapping wheels with Sarrou and crashing. He recovered to finish 16th.

 

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Cink tried a number of attacks as the number of remaining laps dwindled, but couldn't shake Flueckiger, who finally launched his own attack on the penultimate ninth lap. This proved to be the winning move. Flueckiger opened a small gap heading into the final lap and, while Sarrou made a heroic effort, urged on by French fans, the Swiss rider held on for his second XCC win of the season ahead of Sarrou, with Cink in third. Flueckiger padded his lead in the standings, with Cink remaining second and Victor Koretzky (KMC-Orbea) third.

"I attacked in the second to last lap and I could see at the finish line at the start of the last lap that I had a little gap," said Flueckiger. "Then I knew I could do it, but I suffered a lot. I tried just to follow Ondrej [Cink] as he made the pace and I was lucky that I could draft on his wheel. But I knew that I had to attack on the second last lap, so I did it."

Flueckiger revealed that he has been staying at altitude for the past month, in St Moritz, Switzerland, as he prepares for Tokyo, even going so far as to sleep in an RV at the top of the pass before descending to Les Gets for the race. He will return to St Moritz right after Sunday's XCO.

Besides Bouchard, Canada had Peter Disera (Norco Factory) in the men's race. Disera rode as high as 20th, but unfortunately faded to 25th by the finish, just missing a top-3 row call up for Sunday.

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Les Gets World Cup: Short Track results

 


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