Events

UCI Mountain Bike World Cup comes to the Western Cape in 2018

By Press Office · 95 comments

The Western Cape has landed another world cycling showpiece event – the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup presented by Shimano race.

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The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) series attracts the crème de la crème of international cross country mountain biking and tens of thousands of spectators to its races around the world.

The South African leg will open the 2018 season and take place on March 10th on the slopes of the Coetzenburg mountain in Stellenbosch. The event will be staged by Grandstand Management, the Cape Town-based company that operates and manages the Absa Cape Epic, the world’s foremost mountain bike stage race.

“This is great news for our sport and the region,” said Absa Cape Epic and Grandstand Management CEO Lynn Naudé. These races are televised live to many countries around the world and attract significant media attention.”

Alan Winde, Minister of Economic Opportunities, welcomed the news.

“My aim is to ensure that the Western Cape becomes Africa’s premier cycling destination. Securing the 2018 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup opener is a major victory in this quest. By showcasing the beauty and sophistication of our trails, this event will stimulate international interest in our province as a bucket-list cycling destination. My hope is that cycle tourism becomes a major revenue and job creator for our region. We’re thrilled to be working with such excellent partners in executing this event,” said Minister Winde.

Executive Mayor of Stellenbosch, Gesie van Deventer, looks forward to welcoming this event to the area. “As Mayor, I am very excited to have Stellenbosch host the opening leg of the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup in 2018. Stellenbosch is well known as a mountain biking destination in South Africa and this is our opportunity to become an international destination for the sport. We are looking forward to welcoming the visitors, participants and organisers to our region and to partner with them for an incredible world class experience. This is a significant boost to Stellenbosch and will have a knock on effect which will benefit our entire community.”

The UCI Mountain Bike World Cup presented by Shimano consists of eight rounds around the world. Riders are given points based on their results and at the end of the year the competitor with the most accumulated points is declared the winner.

Four races will be held in their respective categories on March 10th – the men’s and women’s elite events and corresponding under-23 races. The races will be held eight days before the start of the Absa Cape Epic and the day before the Cape Town Cycle Tour.

“There are thousands of cyclists in the Western Cape at the time and we hope many will take the opportunity to watch the world’s best in action at Coetzenburg,” said Naudé.

South Africa previously staged a UCI World Cup race in Pietermaritzburg in 2014.

Cross country races are held over several laps of a physically demanding course, which typically includes technical descents, forest track, rocky paths and natural obstacles. Circuits range from four to ten kilometres each and racing varies from about one hour to two hours. The short nature of the courses mean exciting viewing for television and spectators.

The 2018 race will start from the University of Stellenbosch, on to the cross-country course on the Coetzenburg Mountain. A course already exists on the slopes and has hosted a national championship, but will be upgraded by Grandstand Management.

“The existing infrastructure is already there and is very spectator-friendly. We will be adding some world class elements,” said Naudé

Stellenbosch has also been positioning itself as a mountain biking mecca and is a favourite stopover of foreign riders, some of whom stay there to train during the European winter.

She pointed out that securing the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup presented by Shimano round was aligned with Grandstand Management’s growth strategy as an event business “and we are naturally delighted to have secured such a prestigious race for the region”.

Naude said the benefits for the region would include:

  • bringing the world’s best riders to a passionate South African mountain biking audience
  • showcasing the region as an ideal destination for major sporting events
  • promoting a cycling culture and all the health and economic benefits associated with it

Grandstand Management (GM) is a sports event company that owns, manages and commercialises top-end participation oriented sports events. It launched the Absa Cape Epic in 2004 and is constantly expanding its portfolio. GM is based in Cape Town, South Africa, and was acquired by Wanda Sports in 2016. It has staged events in the country and abroad and its vision is to be a globally-admired company with a diversified portfolio of events.

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Comments

Warren_G

Jan 30, 2017, 8:51 AM

Was at the one in PMB 2014, saw Yenny and Miss Frizz in action! What a vibe, so stoked it's in CPT this time, there like a bear!

DJR

Jan 30, 2017, 8:57 AM

................. where the riders etc said the course was not World Cup standard. ...................

Whattabout using the Table Mountain Cableway and letting them drop in via India Venster, will that be technical enough? Oh, wait, that will take SANParks to give the go-ahead, and that means it will only come through in 2098, and by then we'll have flying bikes anyway. Damn! ;) 

The Bull Shark

Jan 30, 2017, 8:59 AM

where exactly is that?

 

I think the criteria is an hour from an international airport. Pmb was right on the edge

 

Helderberg is the mountain against which Somerset West resides. About 20 minutes from Cape Town International airport and 35 minutes from Cape Town by car. And there are more than enough hotels and B&Bs in Somerset West, with one world class hotel 5 minutes away.

 

There are 2 issues with Helderberg though. One is getting riders in masses to the top, and two is a big enough finishing area with good access by the public.

 

The actual trails are very good. Just ask Andrew Neethling.

NGM

Jan 30, 2017, 9:00 AM

where exactly is that?

 

I think the criteria is an hour from an international airport. Pmb was right on the edge

Just north of somerset west, off the R44 between somerset west and stellenbosch. It's 30 minutes form Cape town International, and 40min from CT and, 15 mins from stellenbosch. Google steilte trails. 

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Jan 30, 2017, 9:00 AM

where exactly is that?

 

I think the criteria is an hour from an international airport. Pmb was right on the edge

Just outside Slumerset, on the R44. 

Headshot

Jan 30, 2017, 9:05 AM

Good news on the XCO front! Hope they dont make it pricey to spectate - if so I'll save the hassle and watch on TV. 

 

I think Helderberg would require a serious amount of work to turn it into the kind of DH track the UCI would approve. It definitley has the elevation. The biggest problem there will be access for the riders. As it stands its a torturous bakkie shuttle that takes several minutes.  That said, not every venue has  Fort William gnar  - La Bresse is back in this year and its apparently rather short. 

jimmy hardtail

Jan 30, 2017, 9:10 AM

Helderberg might have the elevation but not the gradient. Look at last years world champs dh track. It was an absolute monster of a track . Very few local riders would even attempt it, never mind make it down cleanly. We have the mountains for it, we also have the infrastructure, they just arent in the same place unfortunately.

Stretch

Jan 30, 2017, 9:14 AM

Good news on the XCO front! Hope they dont make it pricey to spectate - if so I'll save the hassle and watch on TV. 

 

 

 

this is really critical and i will relay this story to you....the last XC event at cascades I saw a FB friend of mine complaining about the cost of the tickets (a mtb'er himself)..and how it would be more cost effective for him to stay at home and watch it on Supersport! This from someone who lives 50km from cascades and spends 800/month on DSTV but cant be arsed to spend R100 a ticket for the XC. 

 

It being the first event, I think you can safely say that all involved in the sport will pitch up...but the organisers should not expect that in years 3 and 4...should it ever get to that

nigelhicks

Jan 30, 2017, 9:30 AM

Okes cant complain about R100 to get in to a world cup. I think PMB was very reasonable if you compare with other world cups...

 

 

here are the prices from Andorra

PROMOTIONS
Forfait Bike: 29, 30 and August 31th
Adults 15€ | Children 10€
Partially open.
Price per day.
 
Forfait Saison World Cup
Adults 60€ | Children30€
Valid for the gondola from 1/9/16.
Valid for the circuits from 5/9/16.
 
---------
 
And then Fort William:
see the image

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Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Jan 30, 2017, 9:44 AM

Yeah, Nige. People are just cheaparses, mostly. 

Duane_Bosch

Jan 30, 2017, 9:52 AM

I don't care what it costs. I'm not going to miss Nino hucking those log stairs.

Headshot

Jan 30, 2017, 9:52 AM

Yeah, Nige. People are just cheaparses, mostly. 

Yourself included I assume? 

 

I think R100 is still reasonable but to put it in perspective.

 

Thats a 80km round trip by car and if the whole family goes - maybe R300 for tickets  - I assume  a 6 year old might be free, failing which its R400. Plus food and drinks - could be close to R750 by the time you are done. 

Headshot

Jan 30, 2017, 9:54 AM

this is really critical and i will relay this story to you....the last XC event at cascades I saw a FB friend of mine complaining about the cost of the tickets (a mtb'er himself)..and how it would be more cost effective for him to stay at home and watch it on Supersport! This from someone who lives 50km from cascades and spends 800/month on DSTV but cant be arsed to spend R100 a ticket for the XC. 

 

It being the first event, I think you can safely say that all involved in the sport will pitch up...but the organisers should not expect that in years 3 and 4...should it ever get to that

Good point. I watch fro free on RB TV, so cheap is properly cheap! No DoosTV in my house.

Headshot

Jan 30, 2017, 9:55 AM

I don't care what it costs. I'm not going to miss Nino hucking those log stairs.

 

I am going for the crashes - there are usually even more than in DH :-) 

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Jan 30, 2017, 10:05 AM

Yourself included I assume? 

 

I think R100 is still reasonable but to put it in perspective.

 

Thats a 80km round trip by car and if the whole family goes - maybe R300 for tickets  - I assume  a 6 year old might be free, failing which its R400. Plus food and drinks - could be close to R750 by the time you are done. 

Nope, not me. I'll definitely budget on a ticket, and go with a couple mates. Even if I go alone, I'll still go. Get a ticket and then go in via G spot if I can. 

The Bull Shark

Jan 30, 2017, 10:11 AM

Nope, not me. I'll definitely budget on a ticket, and go with a couple mates. Even if I go alone, I'll still go. Get a ticket and then go in via G spot if I can. 

 

Me and my family will probably cycle there if we can. Not looking forward at sitting in Stellies traffic on the way to Coetzenburg.

Eddy Gordo

Jan 30, 2017, 10:18 AM

Would it be restricted to coetzenberg only? or would eden, mount marie be included in the track?

The Bull Shark

Jan 30, 2017, 10:31 AM

Eden is too far away from Coetzenburg for it to form an XCO loop of 4 - 5 km. I suspect they will mostly stay with the current circuit which is already quite technical, and just add some more interesting bits for spectator value. 

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Jan 30, 2017, 10:37 AM

Eden is too far away from Coetzenburg for it to form an XCO loop of 4 - 5 km. I suspect they will mostly stay with the current circuit which is already quite technical, and just add some more interesting bits for spectator value. 

that climb back up to the top and then a drop down into G spot would be awesome... That climb to the top is hell!

PhilipV

Jan 30, 2017, 11:10 AM

Would it be restricted to coetzenberg only? or would eden, mount marie be included in the track?

probably just Coetzenberg. The XCO loop is already there and will probably just get tweaked and spruced up for this. 

 

I'm keen on seeing the Elites race through that rock garden. and hucking the log drops at the bottom. 

 

It'll be carnage.

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Jan 30, 2017, 11:33 AM

probably just Coetzenberg. The XCO loop is already there and will probably just get tweaked and spruced up for this. 

 

I'm keen on seeing the Elites race through that rock garden. and hucking the log drops at the bottom. 

 

It'll be carnage.

66393046.jpg

Tubehunter

Jan 30, 2017, 11:47 AM

What most people here forget is that in most of Europe the infrastructure is vastly different at the venues as they cater to mountain biking in the summer and alpine skiing in the winter. So entry fees et al include trips up the gondola and most of the tickets seem to indicate multiple trips over the weekend. The only similar metaphor would be if there really was a DH course built on Table Mountain and you paid an entry fee but you got to ride up and down the cableway as much as you liked during the contest period as part of the entry cost. (The cablecar cannot do the same volume of people as the ski resorts gondolas and chair lifts, so there is already a key difference here!)

Bloukrans

Jan 30, 2017, 11:58 AM

:clap:  :clap: Cannot wait!!

LeoKnight

Jan 30, 2017, 12:19 PM

long and short we in for a wicked March 2018, between the Argus, UCI XCO and the Epic... 

nigelhicks

Jan 30, 2017, 12:45 PM

What most people here forget is that in most of Europe the infrastructure is vastly different at the venues as they cater to mountain biking in the summer and alpine skiing in the winter. So entry fees et al include trips up the gondola and most of the tickets seem to indicate multiple trips over the weekend. The only similar metaphor would be if there really was a DH course built on Table Mountain and you paid an entry fee but you got to ride up and down the cableway as much as you liked during the contest period as part of the entry cost. (The cablecar cannot do the same volume of people as the ski resorts gondolas and chair lifts, so there is already a key difference here!)

 

Yes - BUT - there are also tickets for non-gondala passes ...

17 Pounds entry (R289) entry at Fort William for the day with no gondala access.

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