All eyes on Hafjell, Norway for the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships
Preview the eliminator, cross country and downꦐhill races
The best mountain bikers in the world are converging in Hafj📖ell, Norwaꦆy for a week of world championship racing. Hafjell is located just a few kilometers up the highway from Lillehammer, the site of the 1994 Winter Olympics.
2014 marks the historic 25th𒐪 year of the UCI Mountain Bike World ♚Championships.
Eliminator
The first race of the 2014 Worlds will be the eliminator, hosted in Lillehammer on Tuesday evening. Altho🍃ugh the U♉CI recently announced the end of the eliminator World Cup, the world championships go on - for the third time ever this year.
The eliminator is the newest sub-discipline of mountain biking. Defending women's champion Al🔴exandra Engen (Sweden) will not be back - she has missed the second half of the season due to issues with chronic fatigue. Other favorites include Switzerland's Kathrin Stirnemann, who is the 2014 World Cup champion and Jenny Rissveds o🍌f Sweden.
In the men's race, Paul van der Ploeg (Australia) will defend his title against riders like World Cup champion Fabrice Mels (Belgium), Daniel Federspiel (Austria) and Catꦛriel Andres Soto (Argentina).
Cross country
The team relay will kick✤ off the cross country racing on Wednesday. Each nation will be represented by four riders including one elite man, one elite woman, one under 23 man and one junior man. Racers can go in any order, making picking the ideal race order a key part of every team's strategy.
Some ꦜfavorites include Switzerland, Italy, France, Germany, Canada and the Czech Republic.
Jun♚ior, under 23 and elite individual cross country races will follow on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Elite wo🌞men's 2013 champiඣon Julie Bresset (France) will be on the start line, but she's had a tough season and will face real challenges from several top riders, among them home crowd favorite Gunn-Rita Dahle Flesjaa of Norway, Catharine Pendrel (Canada) and Tanja Zakelj (Slovenia).
Perhaps the most exciting women's battle will be in the under 23 category with🅺 Jolanda Neff (Switzerland), the winner of the elite World Cup, against Pauline Ferrand Prevot (France). Both riders are among the fastest on the circuit at the moment, but have to race the U23 category instead of the elite category per UCI rules🏅.
In the elite men's race, Nino Schurter (Switzerland) will aim for another world title to continue his streak. World Cup winner Julien Absalon (France) will likely be his top rival as has been the case all season, but any number of top favorites could step onto𒆙 the p🐷odium for a medal on race day.
Downhill
The Wo💫rlds will wrap up this year with the downhill finals for elite and junior men and women.
Defendinꦿg champion Greg Minnaar (South Africa) won't have the home course advantage this year as he faces World Cup champion Josh Bryceland (Great Bri♔tain), Aaron Gwin (United States), Troy Brosan (Australia) and Sam Hill (Australia). Brosnan, Bryceland and Gwin never won an elite-level downhill title.
In the elite women's downhill, defending champion Rachel Atherton (Great Britain) will race h🍒er compatriot Manon Carpenter, who won the 2014 World Cup, an𝔍d former elite world champion Emmeline Ragot (France).
There is no junior women's downhill World Cup, so it's hard to predict the favorites in the category,🌠 but among the junior men, Luca Shaw (United States) and Loris Vergier (France) are two favorites to watch.
The latest race cont🧔ent𒉰, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
Sue George is an editor at Cyclingnews. She co🍬ordinates all of the site's m꧟ountain bike race coverage and assists with the road, 'cross and track coverage.
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
American Criterium Cup: Sofia Arreola and Luke Fetzer use late solo attacks to win Boise Twilight elite races
German Maurice Ballerstedt moves into overall ACC lead with slim margin over Brody McDonald, Danny Summerhill and Lucas Bourgoyne -
'Is that it?' - A Tour de France stage winner on the Mont Ventoux, Thomas De Gendt explains why it's the one victory of his career he sometimes forgets
In his latest column, De Gendt looks back on a stage when Chris Froome had to run up the Ventoux to stay in the yellow jersey, how he sprinted for victory even though he wasn't 100% sure he was at the finish, and the best tactics for racing it today -
'Tadej Pogačar is a good landmark in the peloton' - Kiwi Laurence Pithie finding his feet fast in first-ever Tour de France
Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe support rider the only New Zealander in the 2025 Tour peloton -
Decathlon adds shipping giant CMA CGM as title sponsor in step towards super team status
French team hopes to target Tour de France victory with Paul Seixas in years to come