Pushing creativity: How wild weather and rugged locations are inspiring new production solutions at Warner Bros. Discovery Sport for the UCI Mountain Bike World Series By Heather McLean Friday, August 8, 2025 - 09:45
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UCI Mountain Bike World Series is a complicated sport to bring into a live broadcast for host broadcast Warner Bros. Discovery Sports
The UCI Mountain Bike World Series is in some ways the problem child as well as the flagship of Warner Bros. Discovery Sports' cycling portfolio, as it is a complicated sport to bring into a live broadcast. However, the challenges it poses the team at the host broadcaster means that things get creative, and that creativity can be pushed out to other cycling events.
Chris Ball, Warner Bros. Discovery Sports' vice president of cycling events, says to SVG Europe: Mountain bike is a kind of incubator, if you like. It allows us to really get our sleeves rolled up and straight into the development, and then we try and push that into other broadcasts where it works. We work with Gravity Media really closely; I was talking with Gravity Media [at the last race of the first half of the season], and we were talking about mountain biking and just saying it's such a huge production, but it is so incredibly challenging because we're an outdoor broadcast faced with especially challenging the weather and environments.
Location, location, location
The challenges are primarily the locations the series goes to, and the weather, says Ball. There's two main challenges. I think one is the fact that it's not a football pitch, it's not an open field of play. The field of play is so varied. We can be in the high Alps where everything's out on ski piste and it's very open, or we can be in a really dense pine forest in Poland. That means that the cameras that we use, the lenses that we use, the platform size, height that we use, have to change all of the time, so our camera planning and our recces are really important.
It also means that in order to capture the coverage at the level that we want takes a huge amount of resource, he continues. When we came in [to this series] not so much in cross country, but certainly in downhill no run had ever been captured top to bottom because it's so intensive on cameras. If you've got dense tree cover, you've got three seconds of footage and you're off that camera onto the next. I said, look, our goal here, first and foremost, is to cover the entire course; I don't want anyone's performance as an athlete to do this incredible thing in the forest and no one ever know about it! . We'd been at the World Championships in 2022 that a French rider had won, and [a large chunk] of their performance was absent from the live; there was no camera coverage.
To cover everything we're upwards of 30 cameras on a course now, which is huge, Ball adds. Before we came in [as host broadcaster for these events] it was 20 cameras and below, sometimes in the low teens.
Connectivity for sometimes more than 30 cameras along a course in the hugely varied conditions of UCI Mountain Bike World Series is becomes an issue, and that connectivity also needs to be sustainable across all the events
Stable connections
Connectivity in these hugely varied conditions then becomes an issue, and that connectivity also needs to be sustainable across all the events, which move quickly through the series with multiple events in different locations each month.
Ball explains: We obviously then need to somehow connect all those cameras stably to the OB van. So how we rig the courses and how we do that in a very tight turnaround is important. We're in mountainous terrain so more cameras means more power, means more platforms, means more cabling, he notes, referring to the fact that the majority of cameras used for the series are cabled due to the terrain and weather conditions.
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The locations of the events are the second major challenges, Ball says. Terrain and trees and weather is the kind of second big part; the environment. We [have to] make something really stable that a fan can tune into and know that they're getting something really, really good.
As part of that, the operational level of the broadcast has come into play, Ball says. We've changed the way we work on the ground operationally; the time to rig and derig, how we connect cameras via different nodes to make sure that we can be as quick and efficient as possible.
Next year we take the sport to Asia for the first time. We're in North America, we're in Europe, so we're in high Alps, we're on coastal terrain, sometimes city centres, we're everywhere. So that's a big challenge.
From heavy snow in mountainous regions to wild wind and rain that grounds the production's drones, everything has a knock-on effect for the broadcast, which must always remain consistently good
Wild weather
Another challenge which is completely uncontrollable is, of course, the weather. From heavy snow in mountainous regions to wild wind and rain that grounds the production's drones, everything has a knock-on effect for the broadcast, which must always remain consistently good.
Ball says: We've got to make this production weatherproof. We have to make sure that our output's really, really consistent. So we're investing in drones, yes, but we also need to make sure that the whole production works in high wind










