Posted by Editoress on 09/4/10
 
MSA World Championships - Women's Cross-country
Our coverage of the 2010 World Championships brought to you with the support of Shimano
Photos
Many  riders had wished for it, and after a week of humid and hot weather  conditions, the skies opened up on Mont Ste Anne early Saturday morning  before to the Elite Women's race. The course that was previously dusty  and loose, became wet and slippery.
 That didn't affect Maja Wloszczowska's performance, as the Polish rider  claimed her first World Championship title following a three lap solo  effort. Irina Kalentieva (RUS) and Willow Koerber (USA) completed the  podium. Catharine Pendrel was the top Canadian in fourth, while the  crowd favorite Marie-Hélène Premont, completed the event in ninth place.
 The heavy showers stopped about an hour before the riders were called to  the line to start their five and a half lap race. As expected, Premont  received the loudest reception when introduced to the estimated twenty  thousand spectators who came to watch the event.
 The race started well for the Canadians; Pendrel was in the front group  running third behind Italian Eva Lechner and Wloszczowska on the opening  start loop. With five laps to go, the British Colombia rider attacked  on the climb. The first chase group with Wloszczowska, defending  champion Kalentieva, Koerber, Natalie Schneitter (SUI), Lechner and  Sabina Spitz (GER) was 13 seconds behind. Anna Szafraniec (Pol) and  Premont were another 42 seconds down.
 It took Wloszczowska half a lap to bridge up to Pendrel and the two rode  the next half lap together, before Wloszczowska attacked the Canadian  as she stumbled in the long singletrack portion of the course, quickly  gaining a ten second advantage. From there on, no one would be able to  challenge the Polish rider's lead. 
 Behind, the chase group was breaking up, with Koerber leading the  Russian and German riders. Elisabeth Osl (AUT) came from behind and  overtook Premont. The American kept pressing, slowly reeling in Pendrel,  while putting distance on the others behind her. By the beginning of  the third lap the crowd favorite, Premont, was sitting in sixth place.
 The last two and a half laps saw Koerber, Pendel, Kalentieva and, for a  time, Spitz battle for silver. Pendrel had the advantage for a lap, but  Koerber caught and passed her with a lap to go, while Kalentieva was  never far behind either of them.
 With one lap to go, the American got a gap that Pendrel and the Russsian  could not close, but Koerber hit the deck in the "Beatrice" rock garden  descent, which allowed the other two to overtake her.  Kalentieva then  attacked at the top of the last climb and gapped Pendrel, who was giving  everything she had left to catch her in the following sections.  Although momentarily down, Koerber hadn't give hopes of being on the  podium yet and was chasing furiously with less than 500 meters to go.
 Kalentina was able to maintain a her lead to finish second, while  Pendrel slide in a corner, 200 metres from the finish line, opening the  door for Koerber who didn't miss her chance to grab third place. Pendrel  came in fourth, two seconds behind. Osl came in fifth, while Premont  finished the race in ninth place.
 Wloszczowska skipped the World Cup finals in order to better prepare for  the Championships and it paid off. "I knew that Mont-Sainte-Anne is  very technical so we decided to come here and have more rest instead of  going to Windham," said Wloszczowska.
 Last year's World Champion didn't have any regrets after the event, "I  feel very good about my race today. Of course, just one can win and be  the World Champion, but I'm very, very happy with second place," said  Kalentieva.
 The colourful American bronze medalist was more than pleased with her  performance, "I just think you need to go into the World Championships  wanting to win, but third place is great. Especially since I was fourth  until the last three seconds. I'm happy," exclaimed Koerber. When asked  if the chase group she was part of was working together to catch  Wloszczowska, Koerber replied: "I wasn't working with anyone. I was just  like 'I want to get away from them'! "
 For Pendrel, the end of the race was like déjà vu, "It was a little bit  of Olympic flashback, when Irina and I were riding together on the last  lap," said Pendrel. "I kept thinking 'Please not let her take me at the  finish'. "
 The local favorite, Premont, didn't have the performance she was looking  for: "I tried to accelerate to make up time, but when I tried to make  up the time I started making technical errors," explained Premont after  the race. "I'm still proud of myself, and the training that I put in  this week ... today I just couldn't push as hard as I would have liked,  because my tire would slip out."             
 
 
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