Roger Vieira Conquers Genova in a Display of Raw Ambition
Bartek Wolinski / Red Bull Content Pool
In the labyrinthine streets of Genova, where the city’s history is etched into every stone and narrow alleyway, a different kind of history was forged. The Red Bull Genova Cerro Abajo is not a race for the faint of heart; it is a chaotic, breakneck urban ballet where the line between control and catastrophe is razor-thin. It is a spectacle that trades the pristine serenity of a mountain trail for the raw, unpredictable energy of an old-world city, and for the season opener of the 2025-26 series, it delivered.
Bartek Wolinski / Red Bull Content Pool
The course itself was a beast—a 2.2km descent that dropped nearly 280 meters, a constantly shifting canvas of surfaces that demanded a brutal combination of technical skill and raw courage. It began on the rugged terrain of Monte Peralto and concluded in the roaring chaos of a wild crowd at Largo della Zecca. Riders hurtled through Genova’s maze of creuzeand caruggi at speeds of up to 80kph, a dizzying blur of jumps, steps, and sharp bends. This isn't a race for a detached observer; it’s a full-throttle, visceral assault on the senses, for both the riders and the spectators.
The winner, Brazilian Roger Vieira, embodied the spirit of the event. At 30 years old, Vieira is not a newcomer, but this was his first-ever Red Bull Cerro Abajo win. He rode a flawless final, a calculated push that saw him drop in last and fly through the course with an almost reckless precision. His winning time of 2m 41.007s was a product of pure, unyielding effort. “I’m speechless right now, I pushed so hard today,” he said, speaking to the physical and mental toll of a race where every fraction of a second is a battle. He spoke of his need to pedal harder than the "heavier guys," a subtle nod to the kind of silent, invisible battles that define elite competition.
The battle for the podium was a tense affair, with positions shifting until the very last moment. Germany’s Johannes Fischbach finished a close second, expressing his satisfaction with a race that delivered his first Red Bull Cerro Abajopodium in years. The tightest fight, however, was for third, with France’s Adrien Loron edging out Colombia’s Sebastian Holguín. For a veteran like Loron, the third-place finish was a solid start to the season, a feeling he described as "great." The event as a whole was more than just a race; it was a defiant celebration of a sport that chooses to thrive in the most improbable of settings, turning the urban maze into a stage for raw, unfiltered human ambition.
Bartek Wolinski / Red Bull Content Pool