Crankworx World Tour chases the best trails and weather around the world but, even when you follow the sun from Austria all the way to New Zealand, you can’t get perfect weather every day. Friday balanced a full year of sun out in one day, delivering 75mm of rain for the RockShox Rotorua DH.
Dominating in the wet weather were the iconic local, Sam Blenkinsop, and up-and-coming Scottish DH racer Louise Ferguson.
Blinkinsop wins a mudder at home
When conditions are this wild, the math on how to put together a good race fun changes.
“I thought I would just let it go and have fun,” said men’s winner Sam Blenkinsop, adding “I was pretty scared in a lot of places and thought ‘if I crash, I crash, and it’s kind of wet so you would slide out of so I probably wouldn’t break anything.”
The Norco rider managed to finally unseat Brook MacDonald, who had spent much of the day in the hot seat after a slower qualifying run. Belnki didn’t just win on time. He also won over the crowd as he splashed his way to the finish line.
“I saw all the kids hanging out in that huge puddle and when I came down seeing that, I just knew I needed to make a big splash,” Blenki said if hitting “Hecklers Puddle” at full speed. “It’s cool to see the fans loving it even in these conditions with the rain and not being the warmest so it’s good to see the fans and heaps of them on the trail as well. It’s so cool to see everyone out here loving it.
Louise Ferguson floats in from Scotland for women’s win
In the elite women’s race, it was Scotland’s Louise Ferguson at the top of the leader board. The Ilabb rider, no stranger to soggy track conditions, took the top step ahead of two young Kiwi riders.
“I think coming from Scotland really helped me with these conditions. The track was sick but it was crazy slippery. We’ve had pretty constant rain all day and yesterday as well so it was changing every run and I’m pretty used to that from back home. The ground’s really soft, there’s loads of ruts and off camber roots so I felt pretty at home! It was really one of those tracks you just have to ride, you can’t really race it.”
Jenna Hastings, who took second ahead of 17-year-old fellow New Zealand rider Caitlin Flavell, echoed Ferguson’s approach.
“I don’t think you could call it racing, I was just trying to…
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