MTB

World-class start line for world-class Enduro race

By Shine PR

Giant Toa Enduro race manager Neil Gellatly checks out the start line in front of the world famous Pohutu Geyser for the upcoming race.
Giant Toa Enduro race manager Neil Gellatly checks out the start line
in front of the world famous Pohutu Geyser for the upcoming race.



The Enduro World Series (EWS) has lifted the lid on its mission to find the ultimate start line, shining the mountain biking spotlight on Te Puia’s famed Geyser Terrace.

Round One of the international race series – the Giant Toa Enduro, part of Crankworx Rotorua – will take off from the hot rocks beside Te Puia’s world-famous Pohutu Geyser on Saturday 28 March, teaming an iconic location with an iconic race.

Entries to the race sold out in less than three minutes – smashing last year’s world record and creating an incredible buzz for the event. 400 world-class riders, including 34 wild card Kiwis and Blenheim’s Justin Leov who was third in the 2014 EWS – will show up at Te Puia pumped and ready to shred the trails.

Enduro race manager and Rotorua local, Neil Gellatly, initiated the EWS inclusion in Crankworx. He says details for the race are kept under wraps until a few days before the event to prevent riders from practicing.

“Keeping the race trails top-secret is part of the intrigue and also ensures all athletes are on the same playing field.

“Adventure, experience, challenge and great riding sums up what Enduro mountain bike racing is all about. The adventure will kick off the moment the riders enter Te Puia’s geothermal terrain.

“The Geyser Terrace is something else – it’s spectacular, it’s a cool out-of-this-world start line that will get riders in the zone before the race even begins.

“Enduro racing is the fastest growing competitive discipline of mountain biking in the world and this is going to be beamed around the globe,” says Mr Gellatly.

Te Puia Market Manager Online, Eru West, says Te Puia is stoked to be involved with the world’s largest mountain biking festival, Crankworx Rotorua and the Enduro World Series race.

“We can’t wait to welcome Enduro riders to Te Puia, it’s going to be awesome.”

After taking off down a purpose-built ramp from Te Puia’s Geyser Marquee, riders will roll down the geothermally heated steps and along Te Puia’s southern track where they will follow a path back to the southern carpark tunnel and onto the rest of the course. The race will end at Skyline Rotorua, with the middle stages kept top-secret until a few days before the event when all will be revealed on the Crankworx website, www.crankworx.com/rotorua/athlete-info/.

Riders will leave the Geyser Terrace in stages with the first rider heading out at 7:04am. Current champion, Australian Jared Graves, will be the last to hit the tracks at around 10:46am.

Te Puia’s role in the festival doesn’t end with the Enduro race, with the attraction also bringing a taste of Māori culture to the main Crankworx site at Skyline Rotorua, where riders will be riding through specially carved waharoa (gateways). The carvings add to the theming of Skyline Rotorua’s Gravity Park trails and bring Māori culture to the festival, something Rotorua is already well-known for.

The Giant Toa Enduro Rotorua is one of five competitive events at the inaugural Crankworx Rotorua which runs from 25 – 29 March and features the best pro-athletes as well as competitions, concerts and culture.

For further information, please visit www.Enduroworldseries.com.
TRIATHLON
Top International Professionals enter Challenge Wanaka
Challenge Wanaka continues to attract triathlon's big names to the shores of Lake Wanaka in 2019, with some of the world's best confirming their participation. American triathlon powerhouse, Andrew Starykowicz will be certainly pushing the envelope in Wanaka.
Saturday, 5 January 2019
MULTISPORT
Breca Swimrun Launches National Championships
Tuesday, 4 December 2018
CYCLING
Captivating Finishes at BDO Lake Taupō Cycle Challenge
Epic results unfolded today at the 42nd annual BDO Lake Taupō Cycle Challenge.
Monday, 26 November 2018
MULTISPORT
Wanaka athlete crowned 25thPeak to Peak supreme winner
Stunning bluebird weather greeted competitors at the 25thannual Torpedo7 Peak to Peak multisport race Saturday.
Monday, 13 August 2018
TRIATHLON
Taupo named as finalist in race to host 2020 Ironman 70.3 World Championship
IRONMAN, a Wanda Sports Holdings company, announced today that Perth, Western Australia and Taupō, New Zealand have been named finalists to host the IRONMAN®70.3® World Championship triathlon which will rotate to the Oceania region in 2020.
Wednesday, 13 June 2018

News Index »