Having won Red Bull Joy Ride in 2008, Red Bull Berg Line in 2012, and Red Bull Rampage in 2014 (that video is a must watch, really), as well as having a whole bunch of other medal awards under his belt, Andreu Lacondeguy is one of the freeride greats. I managed to catch up with the man himself at Fox’s Hit The Park day at Bike Park Wales, and pinched his bike for a bit, but sorry, I can’t say all that much.
While Andreu is renowned for his freeride talent, more recently, he’s been enjoying plenty of success flipping bikes with an actual motor. That said, he’s been previously backed by a wide range of sponsors, having spent time representing Mondraker, YT Industries, Commencal and Reverse Components throughout his career, and currently, Fox Racing.

However, since Lacondeguy has built such a name for himself, his current bike is more a result of what happens when the mountain bike sponsors aren’t flowing, but your profile remains such an effective billboard. His bike’s frame is totally logoless, apart from the ‘ride loco’ sticker slapped onto the headtube.
In fact, all of the brand stickers and logos have been peeled, sanded and scratched away where they could be. Because why advertise brands when your name has real, monetary value? He has scrawled ‘SA DUD’ on his front tyre, though, giving the whole bike an 80’s James Hetfield Gibson (ESP!?) Explorer vibe.

With Lacondeguy’s freeride prowess, the bike is as simple as you would expect. He’s running a singlespeed setup, because why do you need gears halfway around a mid-air 360? And he’s running a 650b wheel at the front, paired with a 26-inch wheel at the back.

I’m no freerider, but I expect that this wheel setup makes the bike much easier to flick around. When lifting the bike, I found that it’s one heavy beast, so I expect that smaller wheels are a must for a man of his skill.
He’s also running a lot of air pressure in his suspension. I can’t say quite how much, but it was definitely hard to squish. I expect that this is to achieve tonnes of support as he hits fast and steep lips, while benefiting from tonnes of travel when he sticks such huge landings.

Other fun features lie towards the bike’s front caliper. Lacondeguy is running 203mm rotors at both ends, and it looks like he could only find super lengthy caliper bolts rattling around in his spare box. So they’re spaced out with a bike shop’s worth of spacers.

Despite riding through a morning’s torrential rain at the Fox Hit The Park event at Bike Park Wales and hailing from Barcelona, Lacondeguy certainly isn’t frightened of running a nearly bald rear tyre.
