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Canadians crack top 10 as Enduro World Cup returns without Jesse Melamed

Canadians crack top 10 as Enduro World Cup returns without Jesse Melamed

The 2026 UCI Enduro World Cup season finally kicked off on Saturday in officially kicked off Loudenvielle, France. It’s a different year this year; Canadian Enduro legend Jesse Melamed was not on the start list. And honestly, that’s a bit of a bummer.

But the first round provided exactly what Loudenvielle is known for providing; rough, steep terrain, high speed stages and dust absolutely everywhere. Loudenvielle has hosted the Enduro World Series since back in 2021. This year the riders spent the day trying to conquer nearly 50 kilometres of racing spread across the region.

French riders battle for the men’s win

The elite men’s field saw a tight battle between a couple of French riders. But it was Alex Rideau who eventually beat Raphaël Giambi by just seven-tenths of a second after a full day of racing.

“It feels so good,” Rudeau said afterward. “It has been since 2022 that I haven’t won here. I wanted it. I’m really happy about this one. It’s a good start to the season and good points for the overall.”

When defending overall champion Sławomir Łukasik went off course in the first stage, it looked like it was anyone’s race.Giambi took an early lead on Stage 1.

Australian rider Ryan Gilchrist was in 11th place at one point, but managed to race his way back to the thirdspor on the podium.

Canadians Leif Rodgers managed to crack the top ten with a ninth place finish. And Evan Wall ended up in 14th place.

Canadians show depth in elite women

The Canadian women also managed to put together a good day in Loudenvielle. Current world champion Elly Hoskin finished eighth overall in the elite women’s race while Geza Rodgers rolled into ninth.

The privateer Ella Conolly looked strong on Stage 1 and carried that success all day long. Last season she won three rounds of the tour and she’s looking good this year as well. She eventually finished more than five seconds ahead of Mélanie Pugin from France. Raphaela Richter from Germany finished out the podium.

“It went really well,” Conolly said. “I’ve had a bit of a rough lead-up to this race, so it wasn’t expected but I was always going to come and give it everything that I had.”

Keely Bathurst lands on the podium

The top Canadian result of the day came from junior rider Keely Bathurst who came in third. She battled it out with American rider Romy Williams and Bélinda Baudet from France.

Enduro is back

With cross-country and downhill dominating the media coverage, it’s great to see the Enduro World Series is back for 2026. It feels as though many enduro riders are abandoning the discipline (Richie Rude, Harriet Harnden amongst others), but perhaps the biggest struggle for enduro is figuring out how to cover it. And then covering it in a way that can engage viewer.

The UCI put together a pretty decent recap this round, it’s worth watching.

And while Canadian fans definitely missed seeing Melamed in the mix, there’s lots more racing to come. And riders like Wall, Rodgers (x2), and Hoskin will keep us watching.
Next stop: Leogang.

Elite women

1. Ella Conolly (Great Britain) – 250 points
2. Mélanie Pugin (SPEED PROJECT) – 210
3. Raphaela Richter (Germany) – 180
4. Winnifred Goldsbury (New Zealand) – 150
5. Nadine Ellecosta (ABETONE VITTORIA NENCINI SPORT FACTORY TEAM) – 120
6. Julie Duvert (SPEED PROJECT) – 90
7. George Swift (New Zealand) – 80
8. Elly Hoskin (Canada) – 70
9. Geza Rodgers (Canada) – 60
10. Lucile Metge (France) – 50
11. Estelle Charles (France) – 48
12. Cristina Menendez Gonzalez (Spain) – 44
13. Charlotte Rey (France) – 40
14. Lily Planquart (France) – 35
15. Claire Chabbert (France) – 30

Elite men

1. Alex Rudeau (France) – 250 points
2. Raphaël Giambi (SPEED PROJECT) – 210
3. Ryan Gilchrist (YETI / FOX FACTORY RACE TEAM) – 180
4. Jt Fisher (YETI / FOX FACTORY RACE TEAM) – 160
5. Adrien Dailly (SPEED PROJECT) – 140
6. William Brodie (Great Britain) – 125
7. Joe Millington (New Zealand) – 110
8. Marius Tenet Berrat (France) – 95
9. Leif Rodgers (Canada) – 80
10. Mirco Vendemmia (Italy) – 75
11. Vojtech Bláha (Czech Republic) – 71
12. Tristan Botteram (Netherlands) – 68
13. Albin Cambos (France) – 65
14. Evan Wall (Canada) – 63
15. Alexis Icardo (SPEED PROJECT) – 60
16. Gregory Callaghan (Ireland) – 58
17. Kimi Viardot (France) – 56
18. Tarmo Ryynänen (Finland) – 54
19. Tommaso Francardo (ABETONE VITTORIA NENCINI SPORT FACTORY TEAM) – 52
20. Melvin Almueis (France) – 50

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