More and more often World Cup downhillers at the pointy end of the results were singing the praises of the Leogang, Austria, World Cup downhill venue. Internet lurkers, however, had perpetuated the rumor that downhill racing was eeking out its last breaths as Leogang and other boring bike park tracks leeched life from our once-gonzo activity. Who's right? Who's wrong? Did it matter if Aaron Gwin could win the race with two flat tires while riding his bike backwards? Or if Josh Bryceland could win on 26-inch wheels in the face of everyone else using 27.5?
Rider audio interviews with Vali Holl, Aaron Gwin, Amaury Pierron, Troy Brosnan, Brendan Fairclough, Sam Blenkinsop, Eddie Masters, Gee Atherton, Connor Fearon, Marcelo Gutierrez, Myriam Nicole and more.
According to the Vital YouTube channel, the first Leogang Vital RAW video of 2017 was the second-highest-viewed World Cup Vital RAW from that year, sandwiched between Andorra (#1) and Mont-Sainte-Anne (#3). That must mean Leogang was full of epic action or YouTube viewers are really strange. While it's probably the latter, Leogang must have had some kind of attention-grabbing quality, right?
Well now, for the 2018 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup DH, Leogang is certainly grabbing our attention. Despite the gorgeous views and the first-class accommodations, Leogang was tired of being Anthony Michael Hall in The Breakfast Club and decided to become Anthony Michael Hall in War Machine. So long bike park (mostly) and hello super-nasty-off-camber-radness-that-may-be-death-in-the-rain Leogang.
Phil Atwill, one of the most outspoken critics of the Leogang course, practiced on a hardtail last year as a hoping-to-go-viral protest, yet one of the sickest World Cup DH photos of 2017 (our opinion and some of yours) was Mr. Atwill flirting his knobs with the knuckle of a perfectly manicured, gravel-covered table top creating an orgasmic release of said gravel. How can such a boring track produce such incredible imagery? While the motorway where Phil's fabulous photo was captured is still in tact, we may not have to question such paradoxes any longer as the riders seem satiated with the course changes.
Loic's Stumpjumper piss-take may be the last time we see riders lash out at Leogang thanks to these new changes. There's the argument that Leogang, with the bike park sections, always made for great racing, which can't be denied. The final results in Austria were always determined by the smallest slivers of temporal measurement. There's the counter-argument, however, that if our World Cup heroes sprinted against the clock down a brick road (which sort of happened in Croatia), the racing would be exciting. True, too.
Let's hope the Leogang lameness debate is long gone and we can focus on Leogang's finer things like Boris' dream meal offered at one of the local dining establishments; bread, water and a cigarette for mere pocket change. Well that, and some roosty, grassy, foot-out action from a weekend of shredding! Get the inside scoops from Sven, Boris and Dan and stay tuned for another weekend of World Cup DH racing on Vital.
What do you think about the Leogang course changes?
Thanks to Sven, Boris and Dan and stay tuned for more all weekend long in Austria!
View replies to: Good-Bye Boring, Hello Bitchin'. Leogang Steps It Up
Comments