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Tag: Mattin Iñiguez

Mattin’s epic Easter training weekend

The Easter week turned out to be an amazing training opportunity for many of our athletes. More than any, Mattin Íñiguez made the most of it. The teacher from the Basque Country is on a sabbatical year and is free to fly and travel.

Mattin left the start point of the race at Hondarribia on Thursday the 2nd of April and encountered typical Basque weather…

He said about the beginning of the trip: “I went to train the first part of the race. We started in wet, horrible conditions—typical Basque Country. I ran 45k the first day, then 30 the second day, but I could fly a little bit to the south part of the Pyrenees. I wanted to explore the Sierra de Abodi; it’s a mountain chain that I didn’t know, so we tried from there. I didn’t fly very well at first, but we got to the Pic de l’Orri and it was magic. It was like 100 kilometers to Escalona.

The next day I flew from Peña Montañesa, and I managed to get to the Catalan ski resort of La Molina, more or less. So I had very good flights during two days. On the third day of flying I tried to go to the sea, but I was late and I didn’t fly very well, but I managed to get to Maçanet de Cabrenys.”

Getting to the sea was impossible with an easterly head wind and weaker conditions as he progressed. However, Mattin was very happy as this trip allowed him to pass some of the possible turnpoints of the 2026 race and explore areas he didn’t know. He also passed the iconic peak of Canigo, still covered in snow and looking imposing from all angles. In fact the trip was made even more special as there is still a lot of snow on all the Pyrenean peaks, making the vistas even more dramatic.

The trip also allowed him to work with one of his supporters to explore the route, research and evaluate different options. After day three, Mattin was unsupported, without a tent or sleeping bag, with just his friend “Visa” as an assistant. And after such a long 5 days, what about getting back home? An option would have been to attempt to fly back, but it was pure coincidence that Meet Director Iñigo Redín was scouting the end-of-race turnpoints and was able to meet up with Mattin and take him back to his car near Pamplona!

And what did he learn in these five days? “That it’s going to be very difficult to arrive to the sea.”

Other X-Pyr athletes making the most of the booming conditions this weekend were local pilots Manel Gras, who flew two triangles of 120 and 197 km and then flew another huge flight on the 8th of April, flying from Berga to the border with Andorra and back to Sant Quirze de Bezora. On the 6th of April Francesca Mugianesi flew 130 km from Áger to close to La Molina and Pierre Remy made the most of the north side of the Pyrenees with a 169 km triangle starting from Couraduque.
You can check their flights in our post.

You can browse all Mattin’s flights on XContest.

Check his IG profile.

Three out, one in

Regretfully, we have to report that three teams have had to withdraw from this year’s competition.

Team Abruzzo/McClurg (USA) had to withdraw due to work reasons.

Im sorry to say that I will not be at the starting line for the X Pyr this year due to a priority with my work that I did not forsee.  It was an agonizing decision for me and the team.  Getting selected was a high point for the year and bowing out before it starts is certainly a low point.  I wish the best to all the athletes and the race organization.

This is Ben’s second attempt at completing the X-Pyr. In 2018, in the final training time for the race Ben had an accident and broke his back. He made a great recovery to find himself selected again in this edition. We hope next time he will be at the starting line.

Team Viehböck/Brunner (AUT) have also had to withdraw. Andreas, who participated in the last edition, was training on his mountain bike and hit a barrier, breaking his collar bone. We hope it mends soon!

More tragically, team Iñiguez/Tudela (ESP) also won’t be able to join us. Mattin was a hot contender in this race. He is from the Basque Country and knows the Pyrenees extremely well. A few weeks ago on a training flight he flew from near his home to Organya in Catalunya, a distance of 300 km. The longest recorded flight in these mountains.

Recently he was flying and in his words “took a bad decision, but in paragliding these can have grave outcomes.” He has injured a vertebra and will not be able to participate. However, Mattin will recover, so we hope that happens quickly and as painlessly as possible.

Luis Felipe Tudela, Mattin’s assistant and another veteran of the race, having supported several Spanish X-Pyr athletes, has found himself with time on his hands. Incredibly generously he has volunteered that time to the race organisation and will join us in the staff t-shirt as a race official. Welcome to the team!

As it is now so close to the race start on the 23rd of June, we offered the available places to the pilots on the waiting list. Understandably, not many could organise themselves at such short notice, especially coming from overseas. One pilot who will be able to come is Rémi Bourdelle (FRA), last year a rookie, but now a seasoned X-Pyr competitor. He will be supported by Adrien Bourdelle. It’s great to see you back Rémi!

Two massive records for X-Pyr athletes Pinot and Iñiguez

On the 23rd of April Maxime Pinot and five friends, including fellow top-ten finisher in the 2022 X-Pyr Tim Alongi, set the new French distance record. Flying as a team, they took off north of Paris and flew nearly the length of the country, landing together 457km later.

On the 2nd of May, Mattin Iñiguez a rookie in the 2024 X-Pyr set the new Spanish hike & fly record. After climbing up Larraintza in his home area of the Basque Country, he took off at 11 am and headed to higher ground closer to the main Pyrenees peaks. Continuing on the southern, Spanish, side, he flew east, passing many of the iconic X-Pyr areas and former turn-points. After 9 hours in the air and a distance of 300.84 km, he reached Catalunya and landed at the famous acro mecca of Organyà.

What a way to do your training for the X-Pyr 2024!

We congratulate both pilots for their amazing efforts and can’t wait to see what they can achieve during the race in June.

You can see their tracklogs of Maxime and Mattin here.

Without them, the X-Pyr wouldn't exist.

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