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The 2nd round of the 2009 NPS series at Llangollen was set to be the most controversial British race of the year, with mixed views and opinions on the idea of holding a race on such a steep track. There were some who decided not to race, others who came and left and a few who went in an ambulance. 

With the world cup at Fort William next weekend there was a better line up of elite riders than usual including current UCI female elite leader Sabrina Jonnier, Cameron Cole, Luke Strobel and Mio Sumasa along with some top brits. This along with the constant sunshine all weekend and a wild crowd getting behind the riders gave a great atmosphere to the race weekend. 

With Tom Braithwaite and others commenting on the track being steeper than the world cup track at Champery it met all expectations. One comment from a lot of riders was that because the track was so steep it was hard to judge a race pace, and that it would be awesome as a practice track but maybe not a true race track. The track looked amazing, three pedals off the start and then straight into an multi line rock drop, into a steep right hander followed by shoots and switch backs for over a minute of steep track before hitting a fire road were the riders could stop for the first time. Then the track was still steep after the road but mellowed out a bit as far Llangollen goes, then after a few corners more mega steep tight switchbacks where the track started to become rocky. Towards the bottom the track opened up into flat out shale covered corners with more line choices and speed available finishing with a fast field section and jump. 

Practice on Saturday wore out the radios and marshals with non-stop big crashes all day long causing red flags. It didn’t take long until extra catch netting was put up with hope of saving people, although a few did manage to break through the netting. The hot dry weather made for a dusty track causing corners to blow out and big ruts formed after a few runs. With the track being so steep and technical it made a great spectator track with riders getting loose and out of control. 

Despite the controversy before the race the majority of the field loved the challenging track, it was good to see a different style of race track, it mixed it up a bit and also gave a more level playing field as the new track couldn’t be marked as a local’s race . Sunday morning was a short practice with riders getting 1-2 runs in, the course being maintained all weekend had held up pretty well at this point with some sections becoming better for the ruts adding extra support. Seeding runs saw Brendan Fairclough take the fastest time of 1:58 with Joe Smith in second just a few hundredths of a second off the pace. 

After seeding Si Paton announced that there would be a big whip contest taking place over the final jump during race runs with £200 cash up for grabs along with the rest of the prize money up for grabs.


By the time racing started the bottom shale corners were blown out causing a lot of people problems in the race runs. The crowd on race runs was the best I have ever seen at an NPS, the track was lined from half way down with mega phones, cow bells, horns and plenty of friendly heckling thrown in. The first fast time of the day came from Lewis Buchanan from the youth category on a 2:05 taking home £100 for the biggest winning margin of nearly 5 seconds! He held the fastest time until junior world cup rider Rhys Willemse all the way from Oz stepped up with a 2:03 taking the win. The most exciting racing came from the experts and elites with the biggest crowd of the day gathered on the lower sections of the track. The atmosphere was incredible as the crowd went mad watching some amazing riding. The wild style of Adam Brayton was probably the crowd favourite with huge drifts with even bigger roosts. Brendan Fairclough took the elite win and the fastest time of the day bagging £200 with an amazing time of 1:54 with slowing down for the last jump so he could have a go at the big whip contest that he also took home, adding another £100 to his weekends winnings.





The best NPS I’ve ever been to, great track, sun all weekend and amazing crowd.
Results (Top 5 from each category)
Juvenile 1st Ross Wilcox 2nd George Gannicott 3rd Stuart Wilcox 4th James Gibson 5th Phillip Atwill

Youth 1st Lewis Buchannan 2nd Mark Scott 3rd Fraser Mcglone 4th Moss Macriner 5th ` George Belk

Junior 1st Rhys Willemse 2nd Gareth Brewin 3rd Brad Mathers 4th Tamryn Murrell 5th Harry Malloy

Masters 1st Chris Akrigg 2nd Joe Bishop 3rd Dave List 4th Chris Coates 5th Sandy Plenty

Veterans 1st Jason Carpenter 2nd Darren Howarth 3rd Gary Burns 4th Stevie Boyd 5th Jerry Twigg 
Women 1st Mannon Carpenter 2nd Monet Adams 3rd Bex Riley 4th Emma Atkinson 5th N/A 
Women elite 1st Helen Gaskell 2nd Katy Curd 3rd Sabrina Jonnier 4th Mio Sumasa 5th Aimme Dix

Senior 1st Kurt Brain 2nd Oliver Burton 3rd Olly Hooper 4th Tom Gleave 5th James McKnight

Expert 1st Scott Mears 2nd Alex Stock 3rd Alex Bond 4th Lee Huskinson 5th Sion Whitecross

Elite 1st Brendan Fairclough 2nd Joe Smith 3rd Rich Thomas 4th Adam Brayton 5th Tom Deacon 



Full results can be found here http://www.mikrotime.com/mtb/nps2009/llang209.html Photos by : www.eggraphy.co.uk
Check out the eggraphy website for more photos and to purchase images from the event. Words - Tom Whant 
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