Index  ›  sport  ›  BBC
sport · BBC ↗

UK success at Fort William mountain bike world cup

BBC Published Jun 5, 2010 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Almost 20,000 spectators attended the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup at Fort William over the weekend.
about 20000 spectators · spectators
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
More than 300 professional riders from 24 nations participated in the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup.
more than 300 riders · professional riders24 nations · nations
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The downhill race on Sunday covered a distance of 1.75 miles (2.8km) and a vertical drop of 550ft.
550 ft · vertical drop1.75 mile · course length2.8 km · course length
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The UCI Mountain Bike World Cup series includes nine events across Europe and North America from April to August.
9 World Cups · World Cup events
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The Fort William World Cup event is estimated to be worth about £2.5m to the local economy.
about 2500000 GBP · local economic impact
View source ↗

Hundreds of riders and almost 20,000 spectators gathered near Fort William over the weekend for the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup.

This event was the second stage of the world downhill series and the third in the international 4X competition.

More than 300 professional riders from 24 nations took part.

The flagship men's downhill event was won by British rider Gee Atherton. His sister Rachel was second in the woman's event, which was won by Sabrina Jonnier of France.

All the World Cup events took place in or around the Nevis Range ski area and the Leanachan Forest.

Riders took to the slopes of Aonach Mor on Friday for training runs ahead of the main events on Saturday and Sunday.

The downhill race on Sunday saw competitors plummet 550ft down the 1.75 mile (2.8km) boulder-strewn course before finishing at the bottom gondola station at the Nevis Range.

Speaking after his victory, Gee Atherton said: "I'm the most excited I've ever been about winning an event. It's been a massive goal of mine and it's an amazing catapult into the season for me."

Scottish rider Ben Cathro made it into the final 20 of the men's event, ranking 18th despite problems with his chain during the race.

The annual weekend of racing is estimated to be worth about £2.5m to the local economy.

The Fort William event is one of a series of nine World Cups taking place across Europe and North America, from April to August.

A World Cup Village for the Fort William stage also provided entertainment, music and live events for spectators.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error