British Cycling Launches New Gravity Development Centers

Jun 24, 2021
by Nick Bentley  
After taking 5th in in the 14-16 field Thomas Hawkins got to put the big bike to good use and let it loose on the top 100 shoot out maybe a little to loose with Thomas placing 80th out of the 100 fastest riders still considering the company he was in not a bad effort by the young man.

Press Release: British Cycling

British Cycling can today announce the first of its network of Gravity Talent Development Centres, which have been designed to provide an accessible and inclusive pathway for talented riders, supporting them to progress from clubs through to trade teams and representing Great Britain.

The first hub is now operational in Rushmere Country Park (Bedfordshire, British Cycling Central Region), offering regular coached sessions for riders aged 12-16 to hone their mountain bike gravity skills, with an ambition to increase the number of locations across the country to seven over the coming months.

The most talented riders from the hub sessions will be given the opportunity to attend regional and national development sessions, with the long-term goal of supporting them towards competing for Great Britain and securing opportunities to ride for professional trade teams.

The hubs form part of British Cycling’s long-term plan for gravity disciplines, which was published earlier this month (This can be found here.) as part of the organisation’s new Everyone Wins campaign (More information on this can be found here.), and covers all aspects of the discipline including facility provision, volunteers, diversity and performance at the highest level for Great Britain.

At the 2020 UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in Leogang a total of six British riders finished within the top 11 places in the Junior Men’s category, demonstrating the talent of today’s young riders who are seeking to follow in the footsteps of Rachel Atherton, Danny Hart and others who have topped podiums across the world in recent years.

Picture by Simon Wilkinson SWpix.com - Men s Junior Downhill World Championship - Daniel Slack and James Elliott Silver and Bronze
Picture by Simon Wilkinson/SWpix.com - Men's Junior Downhill World Championship - Daniel Slack and James Elliott Silver and Bronze

Michael Vickers, British Cycling Talent Development Coach and MTB Downhill and 4X Coordinator, said:

“We’ve seen some incredible results in the downhill disciplines over recent years, and through the new Gravity Talent Development Centres we want to provide the champions of tomorrow with an accessible and competitive environment as they forge their own paths to the top.

“We’re thankful to our partners and colleagues in the Central Region for their support in getting the first hub up and running, and we’ve been really encouraged by the appetite for riders to get involved and the level of technical skills on display. As we increase the number of the centres through the remainder of the year, we hope that they will help us to further boost the standard of our national series and championships and provide riders with a really competitive environment to develop.”

Ian Warby of Firecrest Mountain Biking said;

“It’s a fantastic opportunity for Firecrest MTB’s Young Rider Development Programme (known as DeVo) to be the first Talent Development Centre for gravity. The DeVo programme has always been a passion of mine and to be able to line it up with British Cycling’s programmes has been a long-term goal.

“The programme has already seen a number of riders go on to do big things with Phil Atwill being one of the programme’s most successful alumni, and this is a fantastic opportunity for more to do the same. The focus of DeVo has always been on working with riders of all ages and abilities to get the most from mountain biking and I look forward to developing the next generation of riders and working closely with British Cycling going forward.”

The next session takes place on Saturday 3 July, and you can find out more here.

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Member since Nov 28, 2019
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20 Comments
  • 14 3
 Bedfordshire. That well known centre of (any kind of) UK riding…..not.
  • 5 2
 @ilovedust I take it you’ve never heard of chicksands or Woburn bike park then .
  • 2 0
 It’s better than most. For a bad place, look at Berkshire. You have Swinley, where you will spend the day avoiding puddles or sliding out, and that’s it.

Chicksands and Woburn sounds like a dream compared to that.
  • 2 0
 @spannermonkey73: Yep, I'd go as far to say Woburn had THE biggest jump line in the UK couple of years ago.... So big they got told to tame it down by the land owners! I recently got an invite to ride a pretty fkng steep, little FR spot that has 35' an 45' bangers in the middle of Norwich, East anglia... Not bad for the flat lands
  • 5 1
 @spannermonkey73:

But it's 'British' cycling... And yet again, as per most 'British' sport it's southern biased.

Chick or Wob, incredible though they are, are biased towards sculpted and well drained jump lines. They turn out out great YouTuber.

There's a reason why Northern and Scottish rides typically do better on the world stage - the terrain is much closer to what you see on a EWS or DH course.

It would have made more sense to put in Sheffield, or the North East, or in the middle of the Stanes in my opinion.
  • 1 0
 There is some good riding round here, but I'm not sure Rushmere is it. A very strange choice indeed.
  • 1 0
 @spannermonkey73: i think what @ilovedust is eluding to is possibly the lack of any actual mountain's, where 'gravity' might actually do something to assist riding. Not dirt jump centres.
  • 2 1
 Rather than consider where the best trails are, consider where the best coaching is. Firecrest are the pinnacle of MTB development in the UK and have been for many years. Who coaches the coaches? Firecrest.
  • 1 0
 young riders being given a chance is good in my eyes, whats the issue
  • 2 0
 and.... this is the FIRST not, the ONLY
  • 2 0
 I am sure Aston Hill will be rebuilt soon and provide a better place for Firecrest to do their skills training.
  • 1 0
 @moulin129: rebuilt? I thought they had Ash dieback?
  • 1 0
 @nojzilla: with 300+ trees it’s basically going to need to be rebuilt.
  • 1 1
 @xxinsert-name-herexx: FK! last time I asked them they said they where hoping to reopen August-September time.... Frown
  • 7 1
 What about us 34 year olds? Damn I wish I was young and a completely different person...

British Cycling finally doing something worthwhile
  • 5 1
 For a small island with not many huge mountains, we already punch above our weight. But this is good to hear, look how good the French have done under their program, not sure about Bedford tho?
  • 3 0
 and most importantly make it accessible to all .. centres where kids can turn up and get access to bikes easily . Its an expensive past time and that is probably the biggest barrier to overcome .
  • 5 2
 British cycling forever up to date with progress. Should have started this year's ago before other countries came along and started dominating sport.
  • 2 1
 Since when did the current crop of riders need a development centre? This sort of shite takes funds away from the whole of cycling and pushes it towards a lucky, select few. Build more trails - defend trail access - get people off horses. All of these would ensure a healthy influx of new riders and the cycle continues. The minute some prick in a tracksuit is shouting instructions you may as well go and join all the over mainstream athletic sports and just fit in.

BC have never represented anything i associate with cycling.
  • 2 1
 Yeah usually BC are just interested in lycra w@nkers spinning their legs and improving power outputs. They haven't ever really given a fk about mountain biking, hence why enduro isn't even recognised by them. Which is stupid really, when it's the biggest race scene in the UK.







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