UCI Mountain Bike World Cup |
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Frenchman Julien Absalon is a seven-time winner of the overall cross-country series. |
Status | active |
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Genre | sports event |
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Date(s) | midyear |
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Frequency | annual |
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Inaugurated | 1991 (1991) |
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Organised by | UCI |
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The UCI Mountain Bike World Cup is a multi-round mountain bike racing series that is sanctioned by the Union Cycliste Internationale. The first World Cup series – which was composed of cross-country events – was held in 1989. The Downhill World Cup was inaugurated two years later, and the Dual Slalom World Cup was launched in 1998. The dual-slalom format – which involved knock-out heats with two riders on the parallel courses in each heat – evolved into four-cross (with four riders on a single course per heat) in 2002 before being dropped after the 2011 season. Riders win points according to their placing in each event. The reigning series leaders in each class are identified by a special jersey. The UCI Mountain Bike World Cup is broadcast live and globally on Red Bull TV.
The replacement world series for 4X World Cup is the 4X Pro Tour and for XCM World Cup is UCI MTB Marathon series.
Overall series winners
Cross-country (XCO)
Men
Women
Short Track (XCC)
Men
Year
|
1st
|
2nd
|
3rd
|
2022
|
Alan Hatherly
|
Filippo Colombo
|
Titouan Carod
|
2023
|
Luca Schwarzbauer
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Jordan Sarrou
|
Joshua Dubau
|
2024
|
Victor Koretzky
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Alan Hatherly
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Luca Schwarzbauer
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Women
Year
|
1st
|
2nd
|
3rd
|
2022
|
Alessandra Keller
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Rebecca McConnell
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Jolanda Neff
|
2023
|
Puck Pieterse
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Alessandra Keller
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Evie Richards
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2024
|
Alessandra Keller
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Evie Richards
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Rebecca Henderson
|
Cross-country time-trial
Men
Women
Marathon (XCM)
Men
Women
Downhill (DH)
Men
- Total stages won by rider + world champs (updated La Thuile)
Rank
|
Rider
|
Wins
|
2nd
|
3rd
|
1 |
Greg Minnaar |
22+4 |
26+4 |
18+3
|
2 |
Aaron Gwin |
20 |
7 |
4+1
|
3 |
Steve Peat |
17+1 |
11+4 |
11
|
4 |
Nicolas Vouilloz |
16+7 |
13 |
9
|
5 |
Sam Hill |
13+3 |
8+1 |
9+2
|
6 |
Amaury Pierron |
12 |
4+1 |
2+1
|
7 |
Loïc Bruni |
11+5 |
13 |
9
|
8 |
Gee Atherton |
8+2 |
12+1 |
10+1
|
9 |
Loris Vergier |
7+1 |
6 |
5+1
|
10 |
Jackson Goldstone |
6 |
- |
1
|
11 |
Fabien Barel |
5+2 |
2+1 |
4+1
|
12 |
Danny Hart |
4+2 |
6 |
10+1
|
13 |
Chris Kovarik |
4 |
5 |
1+1
|
14 |
Jürgen Beneke |
4 |
5 |
-
|
15 |
David Vázquez López |
4 |
3 |
4
|
16 |
Steve Smith |
4 |
3+1 |
1+1
|
17 |
François Gachet |
4+1 |
1+1 |
-
|
18 |
Troy Brosnan |
3 |
7+1 |
9+2
|
19 |
Cédric Gracia |
3 |
7 |
2+1
|
20 |
Josh Bryceland |
3 |
3+1 |
2+1
|
21 |
John Tomac |
3 |
1+2 |
2
|
22 |
Corrado Hérin |
3 |
- |
2+1
|
23 |
Tomás Misser |
3 |
- |
1
|
24 |
Mickael Pascal |
2 |
5+2 |
6+2
|
25 |
Thibaut Dapréla |
2 |
3 |
3
|
26 |
Marc Beaumont |
2 |
- |
1
|
27 |
Benoit Coulanges |
2 |
0+1 |
-
|
Matti Lehikoinen |
2 |
- |
-
|
29 |
Nathan Rennie |
1 |
5 |
8+1
|
30 |
Finn Iles |
1 |
5 |
3+1
|
31 |
Mike King |
1+1 |
4 |
0+1
|
32 |
Andreas Kolb |
1 |
3+1 |
2
|
33 |
Michael Hannah |
1 |
2+2 |
6+1
|
34 |
Laurie Greenland |
1 |
2+1 |
5+1
|
35 |
Brook MacDonald |
1 |
1 |
4
|
Myles Rockwell |
1+1 |
1 |
4+1
|
37 |
Matt Walker |
1 |
1 |
2
|
Sam Blenkinsop |
1 |
1 |
2+1
|
39 |
Rémi Thirion |
1 |
1 |
1+1
|
Podiums active |
Reece Wilson(2)+1, Ronan Dunne(2), Jordan Williams(2), Oisin O'Callaghan(2), Luca Shaw, Max Hartenstein, Mark Wallace, Bernard Kerr, Dakotah Norton(4), Ethan Craik, Angel Suarez Alonso(2), Baptiste Pierron, Stevens-McNab, Henri Kiefer
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Women
Junior Men
Dual-slalom
Men
Women
Four-cross (4X)
Men
Women
References
External links
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Africa | |
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Asia | |
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America | |
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Europe | |
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Oceania | |
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World | |
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Team | |
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Individual | |
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Winter sports | |
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- See also: World championships
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