'Cold and shaking' Hatton wins mountain bike world gold

'Cold and shaking' Hatton wins mountain bike world gold

Sports

The 25-year-old Hatton mastered the mud to post a time of four minutes 26.747 seconds

Glasgow (AFP) – British rider Charlie Hatton produced a flying run to win the men's mountain bike downhill final at the world cycling championships in Fort William on Saturday.

As rain fell in the Scottish Highlands, the 25-year-old Hatton mastered the mud to post a time of four minutes 26.747 seconds  He set a pulsating time, finishing 0.6sec ahead of Austria's Andreas Kolb with another Briton Laurie Greenland finishing third.

Defending champion Loic Bruni came in fourth and world number one Loris Vergier could only manage sixth. "I'm gobsmacked," the world number 17 said. "I'm not sure if I'm shaking because I'm cold or I'm nervous or all of the above."

The English rider has never won a World Cup race but can now don the rainbow jersey as world champion.

"That was absolutely insane," Hatton said. "I knew I was riding well this weekend. But I never ever expected the win." Austria's Valentina Holl won her second consecutive women's mountain bike downhill title ending two seconds faster than any other rider.

Five-time world champion Rachel Atherton, who dislocated her shoulder on Thursday, came in eighth. The winding downhill track is made up largely of rocks and dirt with jumps and bumps marked out by tape on a barren mountainside at Fort William.

The mentally and technically challenging course of 2.8km drops 550m with a lively crowd welcoming each rider at the finish. In track cycling, Denmark won the men's team pursuit title by beating Italy in the final.

Champions back in in 2020, the Danes succeeded Great Britain who won last year but were eliminated in qualifying after a heavy fall suffered by Charlie Tanfield. Denmark, made up of Niklas Larsen, Carl-Frederik Bevort, Lasse Leth and Rasmus Pedersen, gave little chance to Filippo Ganna's Italy who also finished second in 2022.

In the race for the bronze medal, New Zealand dominated Australia. In the women's team pursuit, the Britain took gold by defeating New Zealand in the final. Katie Archibald, Elinor Barker, Josie Knight and Anna Morris came out on top in a time of 4:08.771, more than four seconds of the Kiwis.

France took third place after getting the better of defending champions Italy in the bronze medal clash.