After a pandemic-enforced hiatus, the Absa Cape Epic, widely regarded as the world’s premier mountain bike stage race, returned to action in fine style in Cape Town on Sunday 17 October 2021 with the 20km Prologue ahead of seven days of marathon mountain biking.

 

The Mother City didn’t quite get the memo that the show was back on, drenching the riders with a series of rain squalls throughout the morning. But the rain couldn’t dampen the spirits of the amateurs, the elites, the first-timers, or the crew, with all involved thrilled to be back in a stage-race setting once again. 

 

In the Elite men’s race, home-crowd hero Matt Beers powered to first place alongside French partner Jordan Sarrou (NinetyOne-Songo-Specialized) in a time of 43:24.5.

 

“It’s a great feeling to get the win,” said Beers. “I’ve been visualising it ever since I got a taste for this a few years back. Jordan was just a beast on the climbs, so I let him set the pace and I just hung on for dear life.”

 

Second-place went to Filippo Colombo (Switzerland) and Italy’s Juri Zanotti (BMC – KTM) in 45:04.4, with Andreas Seewald (Germany) and Martin Stosek (Czech Republic) of Canyon Northwave MTB claiming third in a time of 45:14.8.

 

Absa Cape Epic novices Colombo and Zanotti set the early pace for the Prologue, holding on to the podium top spot for much of the men’s Prologue. Until Beers and Sarrou stormed out of the University of Cape Town start chute with aggressive intent to get their race off to the best possible start. 

 

Climbing from UCT and then straight on to Table Mountain National Park, the NinetyOne-Songo-Specialized team looked comfortable throughout, even on the much-feared Quarry Climb and Dead Man’s Tree ascents. 

 

From Dead Man’s Tree riders enjoyed a brief tar respite on Tafelberg Road before heading back down the potentially treacherous Plum Pudding descent. Although slick from the persistent rain, Plum Pudding was no issue for the eventual stage winners (unlike some of the amateur riders, who plummeted with wild eyes and even wilder descending styles). 

 

With seven days of gruelling mountain bike riding to come, the Prologue was a relatively gentle start to the 2021 event, with all finishers pleased to tick off a stage that can sometimes provide curveballs. 

 

Monday’s Stage 1 will see the field travel to Ceres for a 98km ride (with 1850m of climbing) featuring the cheerfully named Death Drop and Dead Man Walking trails.

Tune in to the daily Live Broadcast from 08:30 GMT+2 on the Absa Cape Epic Facebook page, YouTube channel, and/or Absa Cape Epic website. 

GALLERY

Urs Huber (left) and Simon Schneller during the Prologue of the 2021 Absa Cape Epic. | Photo: Simon Pocock/Cape Epic

Team Pyga – Eurosteel’s Phil Buys (front) and Pieter du Toit during the Prologue of the 2021 Absa Cape Epic. | Photo by Nick Muzik/Cape Epic

Martin Stosek and marathon world champion, Andreas Seewald (front) of Canyon Northwave MTB during the Prologue of the 2021 Absa Cape Epic. | Photo: Sam Clark/Cape Epic

Team Bulls 2’s  Martin Frey and Simon Stiebjahn during the Prologue of the 2021 Absa Cape Epic. | Photo: Nick Muzik/Cape Epic

Team EF Education-Nippo’s, Lachlan Morton during the Prologue of the 2021 Absa Cape Epic. | Photo: Kelvin Trautman/Cape Epic

Team BMC-KTM’s Juri Zanotti (front) and Filippo Colombo during the Prologue of the 2021 Absa Cape Epic. |Photo: Nick Muzik/Cape Epic

The Men’s podium after the Prologue (from left): Filippo Colombo and Juri Zanotti (Team BMC KTM), Matt Beers and Jordan Sarrou (NinetyOne-songo-Specialized) and Andreas Seewald and Martin Stosek (Canyon Northwave MTB). | Photo: Nick Muzik/Cape Epic
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