Gravel and off-road racing showed no signs of easing from a meteoric rise in popularity in 2025. High-profile races across mud, rocks, sand and soil in Europe and North America featured deep fields among the elite riders, while amateurs continued to grind through scenic landscapes and epic personal journeys of more than 100 events around the globe, a number that is a modest estimate.

Events at Unbound Gravel and The Traka continued to reign supreme as the ‘monuments’ of off-road racing, with Karolina MigoÅ„ etching a new level of success with wins at both The Traka 360 and Life Time Unbound Gravel 200. At The Traka 200, both Mads Würtz Schmidt and Sofia Gomez Villafañe won on inaugural appearances at the Girona race. New Zealander Cameron Jones made Kansas feel like home with a signature solo victory in the elite men’s race at Unbound 200.

Two of the richest off-road series, Life Time Grand Prix and Gravel Earth Series, earned headlines, with Villafañe winning the Grand Prix a third time and Jones using his Unbound victory to earn a wildcard entry in the series and then winning the overall in the sixth and final race. Former Unbound Gravel 200 champion Rosa Klöser went on a tear with eight victories, half of those in the Gravel Earth Series for the overall title.

performance became a driving force to return to Europe for MTB World Cups and Marathon World Championships. She explained in her Substack article why her second victory in Switzerland was so special and unexpected:

‘One step at a time.’ In 2018, as I rode the final descent of the UCI Cross Country World Championships in Lenzerheide, Switzerland, I repeated those words to myself again and again. I started the race as an underdog – a first-year elite who had never stood on a World Cup podium, let alone contended for a World Championship win.

But the result of a bike race is never predetermined, and that uncertainty, I told myself, could be my opportunity. I crossed the finish line to bring a rainbow jersey home to the USA for the first time in the XCO discipline in almost two decades.

Seven years later, those words returned to me. Again, I found myself in Switzerland. And again, I was leading the final descent of a World Championship, now in the marathon discipline. Except this time, I had a flat tire.

When I reached the top of the last little climb on the course, there was no one in sight. I crested the climb, hopped on my bike and began my descent into the mountains with tears in my eyes. Around a corner, my rear tire felt soft underneath me. “I am sorry,” shouted the cameraman [riding an e-bike] behind me, “but you are flat.”

And that is when familiar words entered my mind. One step at a time. I could win. Or I could flat. In the end, I did both.

That is the truth of chasing big dreams. The power isn’t in controlling the outcome, but in choosing to step forward anyway. To keep going, no matter the circumstances. – Kate Courtney

Sofia Gomez Villafañe continued to dominate the Life Time Grand Prix for a third consecutive season, taking top points at Sea Otter Classic and finishing third at Unbound Gravel 200, then finishing strong with wins at Little Sugar and Big Sugar. She also won a second Cape Epic in tandem with Annika Langvad.

It was her first appearance at The Traka 200, wedged between the South African stage race and a packed April of US races, which made an indelible impression. She went to Girona to “check it out, understand the courts, and make it a target for next year”.

A race is a race, and she went to the front with one rider, Rosa Klöser, whom she said was “so kind out there helping me navigate the course because I had no idea where I was going. We kept the race super fair…It came down to the end. Unreal.”

The memorable breakaway battle with Klöser saw the German crash, but Villafañe waited and grabbed an advantage on the final single-track:

Nothing was going quite right on the lead-up to Traka. Got extremely sick post-Cape Epic, which took a long time to recover from, and I ended up racing four weekends straight, with Traka being the final event. Travel over to Spain was a nightmare, and we honestly considered calling the race off. But alas, we made it to Spain, the legs were feeling surprisingly good, and I was there to enjoy the event.

It was the first time in a long time that I felt the freedom to race for the fun of it and not worry too much about the result; turns out that was a winning formula for me. – Sofia Gomez Villafañe