The racing in Argentina is over and once again Rude and Ravenel have shown their dominance, making it two for two. One of the craziest rounds in EWS history, the deep dust and face shots of Cerro Catedral are sure to be forever immortalized in our minds (and most certainly in brand advertisements). The team behind the EWS take us through the final day of exciting racing.

No one thought it possible, but there was more dust and even more drama at day two of the Cerro Catedral Montenbaik Enduro World Series Presented By Shimano.

Course maintenence was doing their best to ensure the track was in the optimum race condition
Course maintenence was doing their best to ensure the track was in the optimum race condition

Cecile Ravanel (Commencal Vallnord Enduro) and Richie Rude (Yeti/Fox Shox) finished the day as they started – leaders of the race. After six long, dusty stages over two days of racing, the pair made it back to back wins after their success in Chile last weekend.

Josh Carlson riding aggressively on stage 4
Josh Carlson riding aggressively on stage 4
Rae Morrison put in a solid performance, kicking up some dust on stage 4 to 6th overall
Rae Morrison put in a solid performance, kicking up some dust on stage 4 to 6th overall

In the men’s race Martin Maes (GT Factory Racing) pushed Rude all the way, but three stage wins for Rude left him seven seconds ahead and forced Maes to settle for second place. Sam Blenkinsop stormed his way to third place after winning stages four and six. We may only be two races in, but it seems clear the battle lines have been drawn between Rude and Maes – Martin is chasing Richie down on every stage.

Day 2 of racing, time to patch up those war wounds from day 1
Day 2 of racing, time to patch up those war wounds from day 1

Richie said: “It feels good to pull another win. I was just trying to stay on the bike and not make too many mistakes, there was a few, but not too many. I’m enjoying my riding and feeling confident.”

However, the old guard are still very much in competition for the overall. Nico Lau (Cube Action Team) finished fifth and looked in control all weekend. Jerome Clementz (Cannondale), Damien Oton (Devinci Enduro Racing) and Francois Bailly Maitre (BMC Factory Trailcrew) all had solid results here and are still very much in contention for the overall.

Nico going the extra mile and swapping shock for stage 5
Nico going the extra mile and swapping shock for stage 5
Matteo Nati chilled with the quick tire change between stages 4 and 5
Matteo Nati chilled with the quick tire change between stages 4 and 5

In the women’s race, Cecile’s dominance showed no signs of abating, winning all but one of the stages and finishing the day with a 1:04m lead. It was Casey Brown (Trek Factory Racing) that prevented Cecile from a clean sweep of the stages, winning stage 6 and earning herself a second place in the overall in the process – an incredible result for her first Enduro World Series race. Isabeau Courdurier (SUNN) was pushed back to third place by the newcomer. The women’s competition is now wide open – Casey was only scheduled to do a handful of EWS races this year – although that may well change after her result here.

Casey Brown came out strong in her first EWS race, finishing up 2nd
Casey Brown came out strong in her first EWS race, finishing up 2nd
Sam Blenkinsop unleashing it all on the final stage to entertain the crowds
Sam Blenkinsop unleashing it all on the final stage to entertain the crowds

Cecile was one of the few riders who didn’t crash this weekend, she said: “It was some ride! I didn’t crash this weekend which was my goal, but it was hard to find the flow, I’d find it for a few seconds then my foot would be out, it was crazy. I’m happy, it was a good weekend and I’m feeling confident going into the rest of the season.”

Post race celebrations Cedric Gracia style
Post race celebrations Cedric Gracia style
still number 1
still number 1

In the U21 riders Sebastien Claquin (Rocky Mountain Urge BP) took the win, with Adrien Dailly (Lapierre Gravity Republic) in second and Gustavo Ortiz in third. In the Master’s race, Karim Amour won, followed by Joe Lawwill in second and Michael Broderick in third.

Your women's podium
Your women’s podium
Men's podium
Men’s podium

Aside from the monumental dust levels, this race will be remembered for the fresh talent that pushed their way to the front of the pack. Casey Brown was meant to be on the start line in Corral last weekend but was forced out by illness, but she more than made up for it this weekend and is bound to be on the minds of the other women as they look towards round three. Spanish rider Toni Ferreiro started day two in third place, having won stage three on Saturday, and still finished fourth despite a broken chain on stage four. There’s no doubt there’s going to be some new faces keeping things interesting at the sharp end of racing this season.

EWS_Bariloche_Race2-6960

Chris Ball, Director of the Enduro World Series, said: “What an unbelievable weekend of racing. The dust was insane and it made for such unpredictable racing. The last two weeks in South America have been incredible – not just the racing, but the warm welcome we received from the local people and the amazing trails they showed us. A big thank you to the guys at RideSRL-Montenbaik and for all their hard work on the events – it’s been an incredible adventure.”

Full results can be downloaded here:

Words and photos: Enduro World Series (photos by Duncan Philpott)


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