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Gunnar Holmgren flirts with elite top-10 in Les Gets World Cup

Gunnar Holmgren flirts with elite top-10 in Les Gets World Cup

Canada’s Gunnar Holmgren came within two laps of an absolutely sensational result in the elite men’s World Cup XCO on Sunday in Les Gets. Building off of an already-impressive showing in Friday’s short track XC, Pivot Cyles-OTE’s Ontarian was riding in the top-10 alongside the world’s best until an untimely mechanical put him out of contention.

While it may not have ended the way he wanted, it is a huge moment for Holmgren. It’s also a fantastic showing as the World Cup leaves Europe behind for 2023 for the final to return to North America for the final two rounds.

Victor Koretzky dives in to win the Les Gets World Cup. Photo: Bartek Wolinski / Red Bull Content Pool

Elite Men: mechanical holds back Holmgren

A crash mid-pack in the very dusty start straight caused chaos right away in the elite men’s race. With a second-row start, Gunnar Holmgren was safely in front of the commotion. Other than letting past Nino Schurter, who had started further back due to missing Friday’s XCC, Holmgren held his position early on, flying along in the top 20.

A mix of dust and steep climbs quickly started to break up the group. Schurter (Scott-SRAM) led an early group with Vlad Dascalu (Trek Factory Racing), Victor Koretzky (Specialized), Luca Schwarzbauer (Canyon Clltv) and Jordan Sarrou (Specialized) with him. Holmgren sat in the chase group, following the wheel of Mathias Flueckiger (Thomus Maxon) in 15th.

Gunnar Holmgren on Fluckiger’s wheel. Photo: GCN

Holmgren continued steadily moving through the field and, by lap six of eight, into the top 10. The Orillia racer’s moved up the standings all year, in part with the help of strong XCC showings, and looked to be having a breakthrough moment in Les Gets. That momentum ground to a halt on lap seven

Slightly further forward Nino Schurter was having mechanical trouble of his own. Riding with Joshua Dubau (RockRider), trying to hold on to a flying Victor Koretzky, the Swiss racer punctured his rear tire. Scott-SRAM’s sensation had a quick change but was still left with a sizable gap to close to the two Frenchmen in front of him.

Victor Koretzky celebrates a home World Cup win. Photo: Bartek Wolinski / Red Bull Content Pool

Schurter would eventually catch and pass Dubau to take second place, but not until the eight and final lap. A hard-charging Vlad Dascalu finished close behind in third. But Victor Koretzky was untouchable at home in France. The Specialized Factory Racing star wins Sunday’s…

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