Pic: Olympics.com

How to watch Olympic mountain biking this Sunday & Monday

by 250

Want to watch Olympic mountain biking but not sure when it’s on and who’s racing? Here’s a brief guide to everything you basically need to know.

Pic: Olympics.com
Tom Pidcock (Pic: Olympics.com)

Women’s Cross-Country

Sunday, July 28

12:10pm (UK)

36 racers

Expected race duration: 1hr 30min – 1hr 45min (the number of laps is decided nearer the time, depending on weather etc)

Men’s Cross-Country

Monday, July 29

12:10pm (UK)

36 racers

Expected race duration: 1hr 30min – 1hr 45min (the number of laps is decided nearer the time, depending on weather etc)

How to watch it

The BBC. The racing will be on the BBC iPlayer‘s Olympics section and possibly even broadcast live on ‘proper’ telly. It will also be on Discovery+/Eurosport.

Who won last time?

Women’s podium: Jolanda Neff won the gold. Sina Frie, silver. Linda Indergand, bronze.

Men’s podium: Tom Pidcock won the gold. Mathias Flueckiger, silver. David Valero Serrano, bronze.

Evie Richards (Pic: British Cycling)

Who are the favourites this time?

Defending champ Jolanda Neff won’t be racing (still recovering from a respiratory problem) so that leaves Pauline Ferrand-Prevot, Haley Batten, Jenny Rissveds and Team GB’s Evie Richards.

It’s Pidders all the way. Tom Pidcock that is. The defending champ left The Tour De France midway citing Covid (hmm…) but he’s certain to be the hot favourite in Paris. Who else? Nino Schurter, Chris Blevins, Mathias Fluckiger and – on home soil – Victor Korektzy.

What’s the course like?

Paris and its environs aren’t exactly The Alps. The lack of mountainous terrain is a common issue for mountain biking in the Olympics with the Games typically being based in or around cities.

The location for the mountain biking is an old spoil heap called Élancourt Hill. The summit, such as it is, is 231 metres. The 4.4km lap contains 110 metres of elevation.

Although the course claims to be based almost entirely on existing tracks, you can expect to see the usual level of pretty wide manmade-ness to the course.

Team GB riders

Who is on team GB for Olympic mountain biking?

Men’s:
Charlie Aldridge
Tom Pidcock

Women’s:
Ella Maclean-Howell
Evie Richards

olympics.com (mountain bike events page)

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Home Forums How to watch Olympic mountain biking this Sunday & Monday

Viewing 10 posts - 241 through 250 (of 250 total)
  • How to watch Olympic mountain biking this Sunday & Monday
  • 1
    Speeder
    Full Member

    BearBack
    They weren’t even in the same race
    Might want to watch more of that last lap.
    With out the two errors it might at best have at best been a sprint with Pidcock in second wheel
    If Pidcock had closed down that gap and it went to a sprint, my money would’ve been on Koretzky

    I don’t doubt that TP was nervous about the sprint and that’s why he went past in the more technical area.  My “different race” comment was based on the pace that TP showed immediately after the pass – the speed differential in the woods after was incredible.

    BearBack
    Free Member

    sure it was, koretzky put a foot down, avoided a tree, almost at a stop and had to rattle back through his gears, pidcocks momentum largely unaffected.
    Great pass that Koretzky left the door wide open for

    ayjaydoubleyou
    Full Member

    sure it was, koretzky put a foot down, avoided a tree, almost at a stop and had to rattle back through his gears, pidcocks momentum largely unaffected.

    yeah – probably one of those times where the speed is not obvious on TV. Koretzky came to a near halt whereas Pidcock maintained full speed. That gets a big gap very quickly.

    now we’ve had both races – my opinion on the track.
    overall, good, the ‘man made’ / artificial look is a necessity from location, don’t begrudge that at all.

    But, I’ll repeat an observation I’ve had over the last few years a couple of times at world cups. If a pro rider with access to their sponsors full lineup of bikes, is voluntarily choosing a hardtail and/or no dropper; then the course is not technical enough for XCO.

    1
    frogstomp
    Full Member

    If a pro rider with access to their sponsors full lineup of bikes, is voluntarily choosing a hardtail and/or no dropper; then the course is not technical enough for XCO.

    If a large proportion of the field was leaning towards hardtails then maybe.. but that hasn’t been the case.

    The Olympic course is bound to be a bit sanitised due to location requirements / preferences but also because many of the riders further down the field won’t have been racing World Cup standard courses.

    It would have been nice if the Olympic course had been less man-made but overall it did result in some great racing!

    desperatebicycle
    Full Member

    Great pass that Koretzky left the door wide open for

    Watched it again last night and I reckon Pidcock’s planning to be on that inside line at the tree pass is what won him the race. He’s been through there a bunch of times, knows there’s a split in the track coming up with a faster inside line, and if he’s got it, Koretzky will have to take the outside line and cut in for the left bend following. Pidcock executed it almost to perfection, (except his back wheel slid out and clipped Koretzky cutting back in.) However, as brilliantly planned, he was on the inside, managed that effort to get just in front, so had the rights. Awesome work.

    wipperman95
    Free Member

    Olympic and even recent European Championships XC courses tend to be a bit more man made rather than the natural Alpine-type courses commonly seen in MTB World Cups. Who remembers the Euros at Novi Sad in 2021, or Munich in 2022?? This was better than those two tracks. It’s never going to be a World Cup course, but maybe a French Cup or even a European Championships is possible.

    It produced a race for the ages in the men’s (helped by a puncture) and I know GMBN were a bit harsh on it, but there are limitations on the track designers, and the choice of venue. The Olympics are Paris, and everything within reason has to be held there; obvious exceptions are sailing, and other water-based events.

    1
    TheGingerOne
    Full Member

    Good explanation of the overtake here if you haven’t seen it

    https://escapecollective.com/tom-pidcock-and-the-art-of-a-gold-medal-pass/

    ayjaydoubleyou
    Full Member

    The Olympic course is bound to be a bit sanitised due to location requirements / preferences but also because many of the riders further down the field won’t have been racing World Cup standard courses.

    For the Women:

    Lady from Mauritus who is primarily a road and ITT rider. She DNF’d (probably the only one I might say shouldn’t really be there having only raced mtb at African continental level).

    There is a Rwandan who raced Les Gets U23 XCO

    Never heard of the Chinese woman but she raced both Brazil XCO rounds this year and is Chinese and Continental champion.

    For the Men:

    The Namibian has a second in Elite World Cup Marathon, and completed the Crans-montana XCO this year. Looks more of a marathon specialist.

    The Chinese man has finished 3 XCO world cups.

    Liechenstein-ian has raced multiple U23 XCO

    Israeli has some farely sparse results but was top 30 in Val di Sole XCO, hard to argue he cant race with the 35 other best in the world.

    Unless I’ve missed someone, everyone except the Mauritian woman has completed an XCO course whether in Elite or age group.

    DickBarton
    Full Member

    Unsure why the Olympics course is being compared to a Worlds XC race course – they are different events – although pretty much the same thing.

    However, this is the Olympics and not the Worlds MTB race series…as said, it needs to be close to the main location (where possible) and they did a great job at making a very exciting spectacle.

    It worked very well as there are plenty people talking about it – not just fellow MTBers, but ‘normal’ folk in the office and out and about…it seemed to have captured the attention of many people and that can only be a good thing.

    ayjaydoubleyou
    Full Member

    Unsure why the Olympics course is being compared to a Worlds XC race course – they are different events

    Apart from the entry list being limited to 2 or 1 per country, and start grid being done by rank, rather than a short track race the day before, it is pretty much exactly the same event and rules. the O in XCO is literally Olympic.

    There are many many different ways of racing mtbs. I think global viewing figures clearly indicates the most popular format is XCO, an hour and a half of multiple laps on a singletrack course. It makes sense to replicate this most popular format for our single Olympic event.

    None of us know what the LA course will be, but we can be sure it will follow those rules and it wont be a downhill timetrial or an urban eliminator.

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