MTB news & racing round-up for September 26, 2007
      Welcome to our regular roundup of what's happening in mountain biking. 
        Feel free to send feedback, news, & releases to mtb@cyclingnews.com 
        and results, reports & photos to cyclingnews@cyclingnews.com. 
      Edited by Sue George  
      Top riders rate Beijing Olympic venue
      By Greg Johnson 
      
         Chris Jongewaard  
        Photo ©: Mark Gunter
         
            
              
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      The world's top cross country mountain bikers have rated China's Olympic 
        course highly after getting a first look at the 2008 Games venue at the 
        weekend's Olympic Mountain 
        Bike Test Event. Riders converged on the venue in Laoshan/Pékin, China 
        last weekend with enough data logging equipment to rival a Formula One 
        team, as they tried to gather as much information as possible to help 
        their respective Olympic hopes for next year's XXIX Olympiad. 
      The general consensus amongst those in attendance was that the track 
        is high-speed, and incredibly demanding despite being a technically straightforward 
        course. 
      "I think the course is good, I like the look of it and liked the profile," 
        explained reigning Australian champion Chris Jongewaard. "There are short, 
        punchy climbs with not much rest in between, which makes the track very 
        demanding in that way. Some of the areas through the trees will be about 
        staying smooth and holding speed to get maximum speed and efficiency." 
      The 4.5 kilometre course that riders will vie for Olympic Gold on in 
        August 2008 averages 3-3.5 metres in width, with some sections as wide 
        as eight metres while the narrow areas shrink to just over two metres. 
        "[It's] not particularly difficult, it is however very demanding," said 
        German Sabine Spitz, who finished second in the weekend's race. "Personally, 
        it pleases me as it's clearly better than the Olympic course of Athens. 
        The track is coin shaped [with] many short, very steep climbing passages, 
        where one needs much strength. Recovery phases? Zero." 
      
         Sabine Spitz (Germany) waits for 
        the start  
        Photo ©: Didier Weemaels
         
            
              
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      Spitz, who finished second to Russia's Irina Kalentiev at the World Championships 
        in Scotland earlier this month, was one rider collecting data at the track 
        in preparation for next year's Beijing Olympic Games. "In order to take 
        as much information from the round as possible home, my bike and I were 
        equipped with the most diverse logging systems such as SRM cranks and 
        helmet camera," said the 36 year-old. "We were not, however, the only 
        one - Frenchmen, Swiss, Spaniard, New Zealander etc. likewise rode collecting 
        data." 
      Both the men's and women's winners of the Olympic Test event, Christoph 
        Sauser and Liu Ying, were satisfied with the time they spent on the track. 
       
      "After this test event, I think I had known this Olympic course well 
        enough. It was a really good course," Sauser, the current Marathon World 
        Champion, told Xinhua. "I hope this could be the Olympic Games, 
        then I could be the winner of the Olympics," joked Sauser, who did not 
        hide his ambition for the Beijing Olympic gold.  
      "The course was really hard," added China's Ying, who won the final World 
        Cup round last weekend. "You have to slow down at every turn. I was familiar 
        with this course, so I took some advantage over some foreign riders." 
      Jongewaard added that the track with be suit aggressive riders with a 
        high level of endurance. "Some of the corners were getting loose but not 
        really getting ripped up that much," Jongewaard assessed of the venue. 
        "The surface is sandy dirt, if that makes sense. It reminds me of some 
        of the BMX tracks I have race in the past. If you have the right tyres 
        that you feel confident, you can really rip into this course. The track 
        doesn't really have parts that are tough technically hard to ride, but 
        to ride it is going to be very demanding, a bit like the Dutch racing 
        - fast and furious!" 
      Mont Sainte-Anne awarded 2010 Worlds
      
         Chantal Lachance, Vice President 
        of Gestev (Organizing committee) and Pat McQuaid, UCI President  
        Photo ©: Canadian Cyclist
         
            
              
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      The UCI announced Tuesday at the Road World Championships in Stuttgart, 
        Germany, that Mont Sainte-Anne had won the 2010 Mountain Bike and Trial 
        World Championships to be held August 30 through September 6. 
      In addition to extensive experience as a host of World Cup events, organizers 
        of the races at the popular Canadian venue pointed to financial support 
        of CAN$1,075,000 from Québec's Minister of Education, Leisure and 
        Sport as a key to winning the bid. The venue's most recent major event 
        was a round of the cross country and downhill UCI 
        World Cup in June. 
       "Our team's expertise played in our favor, but without the support 
        of the Minister of Education, Leisure and Sport, we could never have hosted 
        the World Championships. The guarantee proved beyond a shadow of a doubt 
        that our bid was serious, and now we will be able to organize an event 
        that will not only leave its mark on our guests but also local people," 
        said organizers. In 2006, the organization had to surrender its bid to 
        host the 2008 World Championships to Val del Sole in Italy because similar 
        criteria had not been met.  
        
      Brazil and Norway were the other candidates for the 2010 event. Mont-Sainte-Anne 
        last held the World Championships in 1998, and is the only mountain bike 
        venue to have held a UCI event every year since1991. 
      In the days to come, organizers will ask the UCI for permission to add 
        other amateur events to the program before the Championships themselves 
        get under way. Over 700 athletes from 50 countries are expected for the 
        World Championship along with 275 journalists and 75,000 spectators. The 
        region would benefit from an $18 million economic boost from those attending. 
        By contrast, a World Cup attracts 400 athletes, 150 journalists, 50,000 
        visitors, and generates spinoffs of $4 million. 
      
      Lehikoinen seriously injured after signing new contract
      
         Matti Lehikoinen (Team G-Cross 
        Honda)  
        Photo ©: Rob Jones
         
            
              
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      Just three days after signing a multi-year contract with his new team 
        MS Intense Factory Racing, 23 year-old Matti Lehikoinen had a serious 
        accident when filming with a friend in Helsinki. The Finnish rider fractured 
        his number four vertebrae once and his number five vertebrae twice. 
      "He told me that he went to go off a very small drop off, about 
        a meter high, on his home trails when something caught his rear wheel 
        just as his front wheel left the drop off. The bike pitched suddenly forward 
        and threw him over the handlebars onto his back," said Martin Whiteley 
        of 23 Degrees Sports. "He knew immediately that he had suffered a 
        severe injury, and remained still as his mate called for the ambulance." 
      "I landed directly onto my head, but slightly to the right," 
        said Lehikoinen. "The helmet is marked on the top at the right. Also 
        I have a big skin abrasion on my right collarbone where the jawline of 
        the helmet cut me, that's how far over my head was. The doctors feel that 
        on impact my spine twisted one way, and then the next, like a zig zag, 
        and they say it's a miracle it's not a lot worse. The three vertebrae 
        have what they call a compressed fracture. They are in the area of the 
        spine that is level with the chest.  
      "I'm still in pain but can breathe fairly comfortably, but I want 
        to thank everyone who has contacted me with nice messages, it makes you 
        realise how lucky you are to have so many friends and people that care, 
        and that makes me want to get better as soon as possible." 
      His doctors gave good news early this week. Lehikoinen will not need 
        an operation to stabilize his fractured vertebrae. An operation would 
        have meant going in through the front of the chest cavity. Doctors also 
        confirmed there are no floating bones pieces, so he will be transferred 
        in the coming days to a recovery and rehabilitation center where he is 
        expected to make a full recovery after several months. 
      Lehikoinen, who currently rides for Team G Cross Honda, recently finished 
        seventh in the Maribor, Slovenia final World Cup downhill event and ended 
        up second overall in the World Cup. 
      IMBA launches Ride Center Program at Interbike
      On Thursday at an industry breakfast at the Interbike trade show in Las 
        Vegas, Nevada, IMBA will unveil a new initiative to build a network of 
        mountain bike facilities called IMBA Ride Centers, which will include 
        trail networks for mountain bikers of every skill level built by professional 
        trailbuilders. The centers are expected to serve as social and educational 
        hubs and provide experiences ranging from long singletrack rides to family-friendly 
        loops, to free-riding options. 
      "IMBA is uniquely positioned to build these centers," said 
        board president Hill Abell. "As a non-profit, we can facilitate partnerships 
        between private industry and public land agencies, allowing us to build 
        model trail networks on an unprecedented scale, and of unprecedented quality." 
      Attending the breakfast will be bicycle industry leaders, members of 
        IMBA's board and staff, and key partners in the planning and development 
        of the facilities. Bob Holmes, of Winter Park resort, and Cimarron Chacon, 
        a trail-planning expert, will speak about the benefits IMBA Ride Centers 
        offer to communities, and the specific roles that public and private partners 
        will play in developing the centers.  
      Mike Van Abel, IMBA's executive director, believes the bike industry 
        is ready to rally behind the Ride Center concept. "Leveraging industry 
        support to gain public sector commitment and resources is a key component 
        of IMBA Ride Center strategy," says Van Abel.  
      Locations will be set via partnerships with federal, state, and private 
        agencies, but five ride center projects are already under development 
        in Cuyuna Lakes, Minnesota; Fraser Valley, Colorado; Payette Valley, Idaho; 
        Santos Trails, Florida; and the Uwharrie Mountains, North Carolina. 
      Companies that want to learn more about getting involved may contact 
        development director Rich.Cook@imba.com. 
      World speed record broken
       
       
         Markus Stoeckl  
        Photo ©: Alfredo Escobar
         
            
              
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      33 year-old Markus Stoeckl set a new world series speed record of 210.4 
      km/h (130.7 mph) at the La Parva run in Chile's Alps on September 14 at 
      11:18 am. The old record was 23 km/h (14 mph) slower and recorded eight 
      years ago. 
      Stoeckl, who is nicknamed "Hercules" for his 100 kg (220 pound), 
        1.9 m (6 foot, 4 inch) frame races regular downhill races and runs the 
        World Cup team MS Intense Racing. He set his record on a newly renovated 
        2,000m run with a 45 degree slope despite challenging conditions. South 
        America's spring weather had melted much of the snow on the track until 
        it was just a narrow strip between bare mountain cliffs. He flew to Chile 
        on short notice after hearing of recent renovations to the track. 
      Unfortunately, Stoeckl's special aerodynamic helmet's visor fogged up 
        easily, so he had to hold his breath for the 40 second run to prevent 
        fogging. "I knew that this would be my only chance," he said 
        of his record run, which went off without a hitch other than forgetting 
        his racing shoes and having to do his record attempt in his street shoes. 
      "At the end of the run, I had the feeling that I was somehow watching 
        the run myself," said Stoeckl, who said he will try to break other 
        records. Fernando Habash, who is in charge of the La Parva ski resort, 
        has promised he will have a course suitable for records set up. 
      Baronè and Christian Taillefer were two Frenchmen who competed 
        to set various world speed records in the French Alps in the 1990s. They 
        raced in rubber suits and wore aerodynamic helmets with spoilers attached 
        to their bodies while riding machines barely recognizable as bikes. 
      Nat Ross diary: Not the best 24 hours
      
         Ross on the men's podium  
        Photo ©: Nat Ross
        
         
            
              
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      Another season's end is nearing and I am still without a World Championship 
        title. My last race did not go as planned, and it is unsettled as I reflect 
        upon solo race number thirty-five. However, I should mention that I still 
        climbed on to the podium in third place. For most races, a top three is 
        my goal, but every now and then I feel like a course suits my racing style 
        so I put my eggs into the winning basket. That was the case for the 24 
        Hour Solo World Championships this year. 
      There were several plusses to the race as well as plenty of minuses, 
        however, it was the plusses that had me all excited to show up and take 
        some names. There were some big plusses. The race was in the fall, and 
        I am always stronger as the season progresses. It was at sea level and 
        coming from high altitude things couldn't be better. The course had over 
        2,000 feet of climbing per lap, and Chris Eatough (winner from 2000-2006) 
        was not on the start list. Also exciting my lighting sponsor Light and 
        Motion released an ultra light new model called the Rusch (named after 
        Rebecca Rusch—2007 World Solo Champ!). 
      There were also minuses. Who would have thought that the temperature 
        would be 100 plus degrees? The race promoter did not list the race rules 
        on the website, and made some modifications come race day that included; 
        no support on the course (only in pit row) and no iPods. Are they kidding? 
        Not that the lack of music had anything to do with it, but my race did 
        not go as planned. 
      To read the complete diary entry, click 
        here. 
      Keith Bontrager diary: The Adrenalin 24 Hour World Championships
       First I have to say that this wasn't an event 
        I had planned on competing in earlier this year. I had contemplated it 
        because it was just down the road, but it would be a week after a long 
        stage race in Germany. That could be very good (I had one of my best 24 
        hour races the week after the TransAlp one year) or it could be a disaster 
        (no elaboration required, right?). 
      My entry was all Matt Carr's fault. He's a friend from Bristol, England. 
        I met him one evening a few years ago at MudDock, a cool shop in town 
        with a restaurant upstairs. I was there to give a talk and ended up enjoying 
        some very good food and wine. I recommend it if you are in town.  
      Then I met him again a year later at the first Twentyfour12 event. He 
        races solo on a single speed, which is only slightly on the unusual side 
        these days. But he does it with a certain style, constantly dishing out 
        artful (somewhat) comedy and heckling other riders throughout the event. 
        In spite of the extra energy he spends that way he is typically at or 
        close to the front of the race. He finished third overall in the solo 
        category at the Twentyfour12 this year on a 69er, the new Trek single 
        speed, which, given the quality of the field and the amount of climbing, 
        was a damn good result.  
      He contacted me to organize his pit at the worlds, which was fair since 
        it was just down the road (the event was taking place at Laguna Seca). 
        I'd never done that before, though it was not going to be too difficult 
        to do. I made some calls and dug around in the pile o' stuff I have for 
        24 hour racing. Megan and Anna were in, so was my friend Ray's son (also 
        called Ray), along with ace wrench Tom Sullivan from Amsterdam Bicycles. 
        Everything was set. He was also, possibly without knowing it, giving me 
        the chance to cook for him and the others who would be involved. Tomatoes 
        are in season, as are wild berries, and I have some fennel pollen I just 
        collected to try. That's the sort of thing I am always up for. 
      After thinking about it a little, the idea of sitting around the pit 
        at a 24 hour bike race didn't have much appeal. If I could organize everything 
        well enough, I could ride too. I had been riding long races all year and 
        was going reasonably well, all things considered. They had age groups 
        and my results would be good enough to get me in. So I signed up to ride. 
      To read the complete diary entry, click 
        here. 
      
      South Island Secondary Schools to hold championships
      More than 220 riders from the NZCT South Island Secondary Schools will 
        race their mountain bike championships September 27 and 28 in Alexandra, 
        New Zealand. 
      The cross country kicks off the championship with its combination of 
        singletrack, gravel road and mainly rocky terrain. A hill climb, featuring 
        a gain of over 220m over 2.5km follows, winding up among briar, craggy 
        outcrops, and thyme fields on Old Coach Road. The 1.7km down hill race 
        will drop 200m over Central Otago's famed rocky terrain. 
      Names to watch out for this year include Dunstan High School's Alex McGregor 
        and Burnside High School's David Scandrett, both of whom are also recently 
        back from the World Championships held earlier this month in Fort William, 
        Scotland. Other riders of interest will be Rachel Richards (Roncalli College), 
        Georgia Wight (Dunstan High School), Rupert Chapman (Christs College) 
        and Jed Rooney (Waitaki Boys High School). These riders are all title 
        holders from the 2006 Championships.  
      Past winners include riders like Holly Kernohan-Smith and James Williamson, 
        who also just returned from the worlds in Scotland. 
      
      
        
      
      
      
      
      
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