The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) released its 2023 teams list today, giving an interesting overall picture of where Canadian racing is at. It also reveals a few surprises for Canadians whose teams still haven’t released their full 2023 roster even though we’re more than a full month into the new year.
Here’s what we can learn, and a few questions left unanswered, by the 2023 team list.
There are new Canadian teams in the mix
In 2022, there were five UCI teams registered in Canada. In 2023 there are eight. Part of that is due to the addition of Enduro to the UCI World Cup calendar. Rocky Mountain Race Face, Devinci Global Racing are now UCI registered (while Forbidden Synthesis was already a UCI team since it split DH and Enduro). There are two new teams though.
Pittstop Racing and Outlaw United are new additions to the list of Canadian UCI teams. Pittstop is a cross country team based out of Bromot, Que. Jumping out of the gates with Laurie Arseneault and Zork Paille leading the three-rider roster, Pitstopp Racing Team should hit the ground rolling when World Cup racing starts this year. The very busy Pittstop crew are also working hard to bring more gravity racing to Quebec this year.
On the other side of the country, Outlaw United launches with a 10-rider roster of young Canadian and U.S. downhill racers. The roster includes Canadians Marcus Goguen, the multitalented B.C. downhill racer that recently won the junior men’s Freeride World Tour on skis, Ethan Donohoe, Jack Macleod, Dylan Marino, Jake Polito and Zac Stratton alongside its U.S. racers.
Established teams are gone
We knew Norco Factory Racing was cutting its XC team. That left a big hole in the Canadian XC scene, with its riders and staff scattering to teams near and far. It looks like Canyon MTB Racing is scaling back its ambitions as well, dropping its UCI status after just two years.
Emily Batty isn’t on a UCI team
Canadian XCO champion Emily Batty is not listed on any UCI team. That doesn’t mean she is not racing. Batty can still race World Cups just as she did last year, as she has the required UCI points to do so. It just means Canyon MTB Racing is no longer registered as a UCI team.
Canadian gravity racers are going international
Canada’s momentum in downhill…
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