On Top Of The World - EWS Rd6
Canada in its entirety is sprinkled with mountain ranges that are climbable (by chairlift or pedal). They extend for kilometres upon kilometres, peaked with snow from the long winter seasons. Being above the ranges gives a true feeling of being right on Top Of The World.
This week media man Nick Waygood is in covering these ranges, providing all the goods that comes out of Whistler Crankworx, high in the mountains of West Canada.
Starting off the week is the gruelling Enduro World Series event, which covers a 5-stage course across the Whistler Blackcomb and Whistler Bike Park mountains. The stages showcased a wide variety of pristine mountain bike singletrack from hand-built loamy, rooty trails through thick forest, to exposed rock gardens and extensive slabs of the same kind.
Competitors would race a total of 18 kilometres in descent trails, with the highest point being a little over 2,100 metres altitude. They would have a total altitude change of 2,800 metres through their 5-hour day.
Practice and line choices were made in the days prior to the Sunday event, with each competitor allowed one practice run down each stage before having to lay down their potentially winning time. To no surprise, the rain arrived on Saturday, providing new EWS riders an understanding of why it was nicknamed Enduro Wet Series many races before.
RESULTS:
In elite mens, it was a tight race between Richie Rude, Martin Maes, and Sam Hill for the first 4 stages. It was until the fifth stage when Rude flatted, leaving the race to Hill and Maes. Maes planted a solid time on the final stage, and waited for Hill to show his split times. Hill would cross the finish line exhausted to claim second place, with Maes taking his second ever EWS win. Eddie Masters in third, Florian Nicolai fourth and Yoann Barelli in fifth.
For the women, Cecile Ravanel held pole position across all 5 stages, with Isabeau Courdurier in a close second. Noga Korem of GT Factory Team in third.