We're back with another edition of The Send It Daily

The Best Trick Always - The Send It Daily - 375

The Best Trick Always - The Send It Daily - 375

Happy Monday! We've got Loudenvielle World Cup Results, epic videos, Whistler trails that make brake pads cry, and loads more. LET'S SEND IT 👇

987 words of pure stoke.
Read time: 3 min 56 seconds.

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Photo of the Day

Kriss Kyle, 90 degrees from logic and loving it.

đź“· Samantha Saskia Dugon behind the lens.

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Video of the Day

A full rack of bikes, a full rack of beer, and a full rack of ribs.

Name a better holy trinity, we’ll wait.

The Fast House crew linked up with T-Mac and R-Dog in Aptos on the way to TDS Enduro and ended up filming the perfect weekday dream: ride, film, feast, repeat.

No big production, just a casual afternoon of sending and snacking (AKA how all Thursdays should look).

⏰ Watch time - 2 min 36 sec

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Bonus: Four dudes. One dream. Derby.

What started as a chill MTB getaway spirals into a full-blown dirt-fueled fever dream of roasts, wrecks, and the kind of riding that makes your hands sweat just watching.

If you’ve ever wanted to know how hard you can laugh while white-knuckling a descent, you will now.

⏰ Watch time - 25 min 13 sec

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Send of the Day

Still the best trick in the books.

Watch here

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2025 Loudenvielle DH World Cup Results: Dust, Drama & Domination

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After a week of riding full tilt into a wall of dust, finals day in Loudenvielle delivered everything you’d expect from a World Cup stop in the Pyrenees.

Blown-out lines, hero runs, heartbreak, and holes deep enough to swallow a 29er whole.

Forget Poland’s rain and snow, France said, “Let’s cook these riders in dust and see who survives.”

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Juniors: Dust, Crashes & Austrian Domination

PC: WBD Sports / WHOOP UCI Mountain Bike World Series / Red Bull Content Pool

The junior women kicked off the finals by reminding everyone that Austria breeds podiums like it’s a national sport.

Lina Frener laid down a heater, holding the lead from sector two and never letting go.

Rosa Zierl upgraded her Round 1 result and nearly caught Frener, only 1.445 seconds off.

Matilda Melton rounded out the podium, and somewhere in that mess of dust, Aletha Ostgaard and Eliana Hulsebosch were last seen sliding sideways into oblivion.

Over in junior men’s chaos: Bode Burke turned his morning practice crash into nothing but motivation fuel and dropped the fastest run of the week.

Pulled back 11 seconds from quali, absolutely stormed the steeps, and left everyone else gasping.

Tyler Waite was ahead until his grip on reality (and traction) slipped in the final sectors.

Max Alran kept it solid for third, while Asa Vermette threw away a 3.7-second lead in Split 2 by taste-testing the dirt in Split 3.

Meanwhile, Stan Nisbet didn’t race… because he missed his start time. Brutal.

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Junior Women - Overall

Junior Men - Overall

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Elite Women: Hemstreet Heaters & Crash Carnage

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Winds were howling, ruts were wrecking, and the women’s field did not hold back.

Canadian Gracey Hemstreet dropped an absolute scorcher, nuking the bottom sectors and taking her first elite World Cup win in spectacular style.

Vali Höll was looking spicy until sectors four and five said “no thanks,” and finished 3.1 seconds back.

Tahnee Seagrave couldn’t match her Poland form, fading hard in the lower half of the track.

Myriam Nicole was on pace to win until a wild crash ended her run and nearly vaporized her front wheel.

Meanwhile, carnage was everywhere: Marine Cabirou rag-dolled off track, Sacha Earnest threw away a lead with a sector four spill, and Lisa Baumann straight-up ejected from the bars after finding one of Loudenvielle’s infamous axle-swallowers.

Elite Women - Overall

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Elite Men: Goldstone Returns & Pierron Pressure

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Jackson Goldstone, fresh off a meh start to the season, showed up in full goblin mode and obliterated the field.

Amaury Pierron looked ready to defend home turf and led through the top splits, but the lower steeps chewed him up and spat him into second by 1.5 seconds.

Jordan Williams sent it into third, just 2.9 back, with Nathan Pontvianne and Luca Shaw closing out the top 5.

Finn Iles had a one-two punch of crashes, Loic Bruni rode like he was dodging landmines, and Henri Kiefer straight-up had a start hut mechanical meltdown.

Meanwhile, Charlie Hatton tried to leave the course entirely, but he’s okay. Probably.

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Elite Men - Overall

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Gracey and Jackson take home the hardware, and we all leave a little emotionally unstable after watching half the field disappear into ruts deeper than your last relationship.

Stay tuned for full replays, behind-the-scenes madness, and whatever’s left of the riders’ bikes.

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Dream Rides ❤️

PC: Shimano MTB

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You know this thing hits warp speed going uphill!

We wanna see your bike in The Send It Daily? Shoot us an email at editorial@thesenditdaily.com, and maybe your ride will be the next superstar.

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PC: Shimano MTB

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PC: Shimano MTB

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Trail of the Day

Canadian Open Course - Upper, Whistler

PC: FRNZ

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304 meters of pure psychological warfare disguised as a trail.

Double black diamond and a double black eye if you miss a line.

It's downhill only, because there's no coming back from what you’re about to do to your brake pads.

Scenic? Sure, if your idea of “scenic” includes vertical chutes and sniper roots.

It only takes a few minutes to ride, but emotionally you’ll never be the same.

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That’s all for today folks. We hope everyone gets some saddle time out there. See you all on tomorrow! 🤙

For the ❤️ of two wheels.

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We write The Send It Daily Monday - Friday (we’re out riding on the weekends). We do not proofread our material before sending and did not get A’s in English.

Our mission is simple: To advocate and bring awareness to the athletes that Send It and the media teams that capture it.

If you’re looking to feature content on The Send It Daily, reach out to editorial@thesenditdaily.com.

For more information, visit us at thesenditdaily.com

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