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Article - 18 Sep 25
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Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide: When is it? Who is riding? How and where to watch?

After the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in Valais (Switzerland), the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series returns for its final European round of the year

Staying in Switzerland after the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in Valais, the UCI Cross-country and Downhill World Cups travel east to the canton of Graubünden and the trails of Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide.

We look at everything you need to know about the Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide (Switzerland) round of the WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series, presented by Le Gruyère, including when the Cross-country Olympic (XCO), Cross-county Short Track (XCC)and Downhill events are scheduled to take place, who is racing, and how to watch. 

WHEN?

The 2025 WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series round in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide starts with the Women Under 23 Cross-country Short Track at 10:45 (UTC+2) on Friday, September 19 and concludes with the Men Elite UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup at 15:30 (UTC+2) on Sunday, September 21. 

Below are the key timings for race weekend. All times are UTC+2 (EST+6/BST+1/CEST):

Friday, September 19

  • 12:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 1 Women Elite
  • 13:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 1 Men Elite
  • 14:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification Women Junior
  • 14:20 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification Men Junior
  • 15:05 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 2 Women Elite
  • 15:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Qualification 2 Men Elite
  • 10:45 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Women U23
  • 11:35 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Men U23
  • 17:30 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Women Elite
  • 18:10 – UCI Cross-country Short Track World Cup | Men Elite

Saturday, September 20

  • 11:30 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Women Junior
  • 12:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Men Junior
  • 13:00 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Women Elite
  • 14:10 – UCI Downhill World Cup | Finals Men Elite

Sunday, September 21

  • 09:00 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Women U23
  • 11:00 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Men U23
  • 13:30 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Women Elite
  • 15:30 – UCI Cross-country Olympic World Cup | Men Elite

WHERE CAN I WATCH?

There will be several ways to watch the action unfold at Switzerland’s only Cross-country and Downhill UCI World Cups of the 2025 season.

The UCI Downhill World Cup Qualification day can be followed on live timing and across social media.

For the eighth UCI Cross-country Olympic, UCI Cross-country Short Track and UCI Downhill World Cups of the season, you can watch the finals live anywhere in the world. Both the men’s and women's UCI Downhill World Cup Junior races will be broadcast live on discovery+ (in front of paywall), HBO Max* (in front of the sports add-on) and MTBWS TV (included in subscription), while the Elite finals will be shown on one of the below channels or streaming services:

North America

South & Central America

  • All Central and South American territories – MTBWS TV

Asia

  • Indonesia, Macao, Malaysia, Mongolia, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand – Eurosport
  • China - Zhibo.TV (Only Elite Downhill races live)
  • All other Asian territories – MTBWS TV

Oceania

Africa

Angola, Burundi, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Cape Verde, Cote d'lvoire, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial, Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mayotte, Mozambique, Mali, Mauritania, Namibia, Nigeria, Niger, Reunion, Rwanda, South Africa, Eswatini, São Tome and Principe, St Helena and Ascension, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Seychelles, Socotra, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zimbabwe, and Zambia - Supersport

All African territories – MTBWS TV

Europe

  • Andorra – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Austria – discovery+, Eurosport
  • Belgium – HBO Max, Eurosport, LN24 (only Men’s Elite XCO race live)
  • Bosnia & Herzegovina – Max, Eurosport
  • Bulgaria – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Croatia – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Czechia – HBO Max, Eurosport, CT Sport+ (only Elite XCO and XCC races live)
  • Denmark – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Faroe Islands – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • France – HBO Max, Eurosport, L’Equipe (only Elite Downhill and XCO races live)
  • Germany – discovery+, Eurosport
  • Hungary – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Ireland – TNT Sports
  • Italy – discovery+, Eurosport
  • Moldova – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Montenegro – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Netherlands – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • North Macedonia – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Norway – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Poland – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Portugal – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Romania – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Serbia – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Slovakia – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Slovenia – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Spain – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Sweden – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • Switzerland – MTBWS TV , SRF/RSI
  • Türkiye – HBO Max, Eurosport
  • United Kingdom – discovery+, TNT Sports
  • All other European territories – MTBWS TV

RIDERS TO WATCH

In Downhill, the battle between Jackson Goldstone (Santa Cruz Syndicate) and Loïc Bruni (Specialized Gravity) resumes after the pair had a very different UCI Mountain Bike World Championships. Goldstone took the win in Champéry, Valais (Switzerland), adding an Elite rainbow jersey to his junior title from 2021. Five-time UCI World Champion Bruni, meanwhile, had a race to forget, finishing down in 49th. The Canadian holds a small, 25-point lead with three rounds to go, and every placing from here to Mont-Sainte-Anne (Canada) crucial in the destination of the title.

The women’s battle is almost as close, with Valentina Höll (YT Mob) and Gracey Hemstreet (Norco Race Division) separated by 59 points. The Austrian finds herself on the top spot without a UCI World Cup win this season, although her fourth consecutive UCI Mountain Bike World Championships win in Champéry might just unlock some more race-winning form for the 23-year-old.

Hemstreet might not have the consistency, but has shown she can win, clinching three UCI World Cup rounds this series, including the most recent in Les Gets, Haute-Savoie (France). With a series finale on the cards in Canada, expect the 20-year-old to try and take the title fight to the last round, where she will have the backing of a partisan home crowd.

Either side of the Downhill action is the Friday’s XCC and Sunday’s XCO, with both series heating up with only three rounds to go.

Christopher Blevins (Specialized Factory Racing) and Evie Richards (Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli) lead the respective XCC series, but both riders are on different trajectories after mixed performances in Les Gets, Haute-Savoie and last weekend’s UCI Mountain Bike World Championships.

Blevins’ title is all but secured, the American able to build an unassailable lead over second-placed Charlie Alridge (Cannondale Factory Racing) before a pedal stroke in North America. He finished second to teammate Victor Koretzky (Specialized Factory Racing) in the UCI World Championships, and will be aiming to add even more wins to the five consecutive victories earlier this season.

Richards’ table-topping position is less certain. The 2024 UCI Mountain Bike World Champion in XCC has a slender 40-point lead over the newly crowned rainbow jersey, Alessandra Keller (Thömus Maxon), and the Swiss rider appears to be in the ascendancy and hitting form just at the right time.

Victory on Sunday would also effectively wrap up the title for Blevins in the XCO, but the American has been less consistent over the longer format in recent times. Here, Luca Martin (Cannondale Factory Racing) is the man to beat, having won in Les Gets, Haute-Savoie and finished second behind Thomas Pidcock (Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team) in Pal Arinsal (Andorra). But the Frenchman might have left things too late to mount a serious title bid. All eyes, however, will be on Nino Schurter (Scott-SRAM MTB Race Team), with Lenzerheide the G.O.A.T’s final ever UCI World Cup appearance.

In the women’s field, Samara Maxwell (Decathlon Ford Racing Team) could also mathematically wrap things up if other results go her way, but the New Zealander can expect the new UCI XCO Mountain Bike World Champion Jenny Rissveds (Canyon CLLCTV XCO) to push her all the way to Mont-Sainte-Anne. The Swedish rider is in a rich vein of form, and has won her last three XCO races, which also include the UCI World Cup in Les Gets, Haute-Savoie and the 2025 UEC European Continental Championships. 

Racing gets underway on Friday, September 19 in Bike Kingdom - Lenzerheide.

Full schedule and event details are available HERE.

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