Mavic Trans-Provence Day Six: Video and Results

Oct 4, 2013 at 10:43
by Mavic HQ  

Day 6 Mavic® Trans-Provence 2013
Sospel -> Menton
The final day. A day of reckoning.


It's actually a relatively short one by Mavic® Trans-Provence standards. A mere 40km long but it still manages to throw in nearly 1000m of climbing just when the riders' legs could do without it.

For many riders, just hanging on to make it until the last day is enough. Many will have just come to compete with themselves. To see if they could finish. Others with grander expectations are now - due to a mechanical or a couple of wrong turns early on in the week - riding with altered intentions. Contenders become riders.

In this year's Mavic® Trans-Provence what's incredible is the closeness of the racing. After six days and more than 300km of mountain biking (with just over two hours of timed racing) at the start of this final morning there is only four seconds splitting the top two riders. Between third and fourth there's only nine seconds.

Four seconds. That's one slightly misjudged switchback. Or braking a couple of times a little harder than you needed to. Bare in mind that if Fabien Barel hadn't had a mechanical on Day 4 he would have no doubt been within seconds of the first two today.

To race at this pace, at the top of the game, is about control. Taking calculated risks. Not pinch flatting. Conserving your bike (a brand new bike feels pretty old after a week here). Not to mention being fit enough to ride at your maximum every single day.

This applies to the mid-pack tussles further down the rider list with the more mortal riders that are still here to race each other. There's almost certainly someone above you in the list that you can beat today. There's also someone below you that can that can take back those precious seconds that you gained over them. It might only be a race between you and one other rider but after six days it seems vital.

Behind all this racing are the Mavic® Trans-Provence crew. The whole motley bunch of them. The drivers for the uplifts and for moving bikes.The campsite crew who make sure that when riders get to the camp at night the tents are ready, there's chairs to sit in and the beers are on ice. An amazing team of chefs and helpers makes sure that everyone is fed three times a day. There's a three course meal every night. There's mountain staff that operate the timing devices at the bottom of stages and make sure that people get off the mountain safely every day and no one is left behind.

Our timing people that turn the data from the timing chips into numbers on the screen, there's the lonely sweeper picking up every last route marker and bundling up the course tape. Once they've passed through there's minimal sign that we've travelled through the country around us. And of course there's the small army of camera wielding media types trying to make sure you get your daily online fix of Mavic® Trans-Provence by proxy.

The whole thing wouldn't wouldn't be possible without the Mastermind/Madman of it all: Ash Smith. Ash and his family. His partner Melissa helping out behind the scenes. His omnipresent father (and provider of "useful tips" to many a pro racer). Without those people the event would never happen at all.

Day 6 Results.

Overall Standings after 6 Stages.

We hope you've enjoyed this years coverage, keep your eye out for the highlights video over the next week, if you've enjoyed and you think your up to it why not apply when the entries open for next years event.

This Press Release isn't going to tell you the results. Check the video. Enjoy the last day's racing. You never know, there could have been a major upset today.

Until next year. À bientôt.
The Mavic® Trans-Provence Crew


Author Info:
mavic avatar

Member since May 9, 2012
39 articles

26 Comments
  • 12 3
 seems like 1 second could easily be lost or gained using the current timing system... you see the guys come flying down and one of the workers has to be super fast and accurate with grabbing the timing unit and clocking it..... this will need to be changed into a more precise process
  • 1 15
flag smgishot13 (Oct 5, 2013 at 19:17) (Below Threshold)
 Or people could just get over it, because it's just a has-been race.
  • 11 0
 my respect for clementz just grows and grows.
  • 5 0
 Yeah ! Cool place ... I wanna go there for my 40th birthday with all my mates ... Not racing, just riding those places ! Nom de dieu ! Putain, j'adore !!!!
  • 5 1
 OMG!!!! 6 days of racing stupidly hard trails and that's all that separates NL & JC!!! Well done to everyone that made it through to the end!!
  • 4 0
 I just love FB he is a beast and a super nice guy too!

shuttled intentionally or not - he is one of the best riders out there - FACT

my "wanna be like" rider.
  • 6 1
 Anton Cooper in 6th place! Shit me. Mark my words: The kids gunna be huge.
  • 1 0
 The guy is a machine. Fit as hell, and has great technical skills. Awesome all rounder.
  • 2 1
 All in all this week we've seen very little of Nicolas Lau and a lot of Clementz. Even after victory of Lau! Nothing against Jérôme, he's a good guy and not just in front of the camera I can say. But Lau has been kindly ignored during the race. Even Barel got lot more coverage. Is it cause he's more talkative? Or cause he's on Mavic?
Whatever. That the winner got so little media exposure is just wierd. We've seen Ball and Martin more often! Or Cancelier even!?
  • 1 0
 There's more footage of Nico as well, yet the editor chose to use Jerome's for the clips. However, keep an eye out for more vids to come.
  • 2 0
 I will for sure! This race is amazing...
  • 4 0
 1 sec after 2h 40 min racing?? Wow that's sick!
  • 1 0
 Amazing trip on magnificient trails for an incredible race (And finish)
1 seconde... as the Fail turn of Jey Clementz where Nico Lau ride perfectly (~ 1'40" on vid)
  • 1 0
 is the actitude of clementz the reason why i left downhill racing and enter with both feets on enduro...one of my best decisions
  • 2 0
 Amazing close finish. Would have been nice to see how Barel would have placed without his technical.
  • 5 7
 I bet you this is what they'll all be racing next year: www.Trans-Savoie.com. 6 days, but twice the vertical and double the on the clock time. Rene WIldhaber took it this year in a total time of well over 4 hours. Do you think think Lau, Barel and Clementz could beat that?
  • 2 0
 Jerome Clementz must be very upset !
  • 1 0
 Didn't some dude win entry to race this? Or am I thinking of something else...?
  • 2 0
 Awesome event
  • 1 0
 Absolute amazing riding, some sweet trails
  • 2 0
 I would love to do this.
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