Tracy Moseley and Cedric Gracia win Mondraker Enduro Final
Mondraker Enduro Final, La Fenasosa, Spain
Words: Tracy Moseley
Photos: WILDWOLF STOCKPHOTO
The racing season is slowly coming to an end and this weekend was the final of the Spanish Enduro series sponsored by Mondraker Bicycles. 2012 has been the first year of the Mondraker Enduro Series and over the year they have hosted 5 races, 3 in Spain, 1 in Andorra and 1 in France with on average 150 participants enjoying some great racing.
With an entry fee of just 25 euros which includes open training on Saturday, 5 stages of racing with beam timing on Sunday, free t-shirt, food out on the trail and lunch after the race and a massive raffle of prizes at the prize giving making it outstanding value for money and I’m sure next year will attract even more participants.
The final round took place just an hour north of Alicante at a privately owned bike park called La Fenasosa. It’s a location that has been used for many bike tests and is open every weekend to the public to ride the DH, freeride trails and jump park, all serviced by uplifts in old army vehicles and accommodation and food is provided by the owner Jean-Philippe at the castle on the grounds of the estate!
A perfect set up that can cater for up to 50 riders every weekend. It was the first Enduro race at La Fenasosa, but with Mondraker Bicycles being based in Alicante and additional sponsor for this event Wildwolf also based in Alicante it was the perfect location for a big finish to the season.
With much of europe experiencing the first cold snap of winter and the Alps getting their first dump of snow, Alicante also experienced some cold weather over the weekend. At 8am when the first rider left the start it was only just getting above freezing but it wasn’t long before the sun came out and it was then plenty hot enough for me ! The course was a 23km loop with 1000m of climbing, so it was a pretty short sharp loop with some steep loose gravel climbs that really started to take its toll towards the end of the race.
Leaving the start it was around a 20min climb up to stage 1, which I was glad of as stage 1 was the most technical and I wanted to make sure I had woken up, and warmed up properly after my 8 .08am start ! Stage 1 was around 4min30sec long and had 2 distinct sections, the top was gnarly jagged rock that was relentless. Carrying speed and conserving your bike was the key to this stage. It would have been so easy to get a puncture or damage a wheel if you pushed too hard at the top. The second half was much smoother bike park style with jumps and berms winding its way to the bottom of the estate. This was probably the most downhill and least pedalling of all the stages.
Up to stage 2 was a short but pretty brutal transition, almost 20min of rocky steep track that was just that bit too steep to ride without putting yourself into a painful place so most people opted to push most of the way. The transition time here was pretty tight and most people only had a few minutes to get ready for the stage. Stage 2 was fairly short, starting with a fun rocky narrow gully which then joined an uphill fireroad sprint for about 20sec and then a flat fireroad which seemed to go on forever to the finish! I did not get chance to pre-ride this stage so the big pedal was a little of a shock to the system! From the finish of stage 2 it was another 20+min climb up to the start of stage 3.
Stage 3 was the most physical of the day. It started on the ‘bambi’ trail, which is a beginner trail of jumps and berms. A really fun trail to roll down, but racing it was tough, there was so much sprinting and squashing of jumps it was an exhausting start to the stage. You were already breathing hard before you started the 1min + climb back up to the finish at the castle! Finishing back at the castle gave us chance to grab some food and cold isotonic drink from the Wildwolf bar before continuing on to stage 4.
Stage 4 was the longest stage of the day with times of over 7mins for the fast guys. It started off flat out and fast down a rocky gully that just got narrower and narrower, with jumps, north shore and at one point the gully is impassable so a wooden corkscrew has been made to transfer you down to the next level to continue riding in the gully ! The gully slowly opened up again and the trail flattened out into the finish. It was a fun stage but a hard one as it was really hard to keep flow. The only way was to keep pedalling everywhere you could fit a pedal stroke in. From the finish of stage 4 it was then the toughest and longest climb up to stage 5 which started at the highest point of the estate. It was close to a 40min slog up some steep loose fireroad and again there was little time to recover or to try and eat some food.
Stage 5 started with some steeper rocky terrain which then broke out into the open onto a section of jumps and then onto a flat out pedal along some rocky flat fireroad trail all the way back to the finish at the castle. Returning back to the castle after being out for around 3.5 hours it really was a tough enduro race with a big focus on pedalling and fitness, it was a hard morning of racing ! Live timing was available all day and the results were up within minutes of the finish. After a quick shower it was time to enjoy what the Europeans do best…food at bike races !
A massive big paella dish had been placed above a small log fire in the finish area and everyone sat around having a beer watching the biggest dish of Paella you have ever seen being created ! Once everyone had been feed the podium took place and the mountain of prizes were given away.
This race was a big one for Cedric Gracia as it was his first race back since shattering his hip at Val Di Sole back in June. Quite remarkable that in 4 months he is back on his bike and obviously in great shape taking the win on the day ahead of Fabien Barel. 3rd place went to Spanish rider Jacobo Santana Pastor. I was happy with my race taking the win in the ladies and 19th place overall.
A big thanks to Wildwolf for the invite, to Jean-Phillipe and his family for their hospitality and to the organisation for a great event.















What bike is CG riding?
Is he on the Tallboy?
That’s what I thought. Need a trained Dirt eye though to confirm.
Cedric is a machine, only back on his bike a few weeks ago and beating Barel by 1 minute!
so good to see CG back on the bike, and slaying it!
RT @DirtMagazine: @CedricGracia is back to his winning ways! Great La Fenesosa enduro write up from @tracy_moseley http://t.co/ck4LAgvs
The man’s an insperation to all of us!
Tallboy LTc is the bike that CG is on. It is on of the best if not the best 29″ AM machines out there.
that race looks mint, 25 euros? = rip off britain. Plus Gracia’s return from injury is astonishing, particurly as he’s 30something
Gracia is some buck, winning races against tough competition (barels some boyo too!) after that horrible injury, legend of a man
“@DirtMagazine: @CedricGracia is back to winning ways! Great La Fenesosa enduro write up from @tracy_moseley http://t.co/gur6mPDx” yeah CG!
most important part of this is that Gracia is back on a bike and competitive – fuckin hero!
Agree with all the comments about CG. My first reaction when I saw the headline was to say to myself “nah, can’t be”. So glad my little voice was wrong. How does he do it?
CG You star.
I like the Mondraker casserole dish the winner gets.
‘Mad props’ to CG, some boy.
wow CG really is a machine
even lance didnt come back that quick!!!!
in light of the new rules for uk gravity enduros, do they have to wear thefull faces on the 1000m of climbing?
Mondraker sponsored an enduro race on Exmoor in September, only £25 to enter, organised by Shred magazine. Barel was there too. Good fun!