Mountain Biking UK
Mountain Biking UK (often shortened to MBUK) is a British mountain biking magazine. It is published by Immediate Media and is currently the UK's best-selling mountain bike magazine, with a circulation of 38,482 (ABC: Jan - Dec 2010).
Editor | Danny Walter |
---|---|
Categories | Sports magazine |
Frequency | Monthly |
Year founded | 1988 |
Company | Immediate Media |
Country | United Kingdom |
Based in | Kent Bath |
Language | English |
Website | www |
ISSN | 0954-8696 |
History and profile
MBUK was launched in 1988 by Pacificon Ltd. Edited by Tym Manley who remained editor at large until 2009.Chris Turner M.D. and Publisher sold the title to Chris Anderson of Future Publishing in 2010 for an undisclosed amount and in 2014, former-owner Future plc sold all its sport and craft titles to Immediate Media Company, including the MBUK title.[1] The current editor is Danny Walter. There are currently 13 issues a year, and the magazine has a policy of including 'covermount' gifts such as stickers, gloves, socks and DVDs.
MBUK covers all mountain biking disciplines; trials, downhill, cross-country, dirt jumping, free-riding and 4X. Future plc's readership demographics research has indicated the magazine's readership to be 95% male, with an average age of 24.5.
Since 1989 MBUK has carried the ovine-based cartoon strip, Mint Sauce, the tales of a mountain-biking sheep and his friends.
In July 2006 MBUK released its 200th edition. To mark the occasion, Cedric Gracia (leading French downhill and 4X racer) was guest editor.
In May 2008 MBUK released their 20th anniversary issue, issue #225. It came with eight free gifts and a fold-out front cover of Steve Peat.
Team MBUK
The magazine along with co-sponsors such as Nike, Santa Cruz and Fox Racing operated a successful professional mountain bike team from the mid-1990s until the mid-2000s, including riders of the calibre of Steve Peat, Scott Beaumont, Rob Warner and Will Longden and competing in the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup.
References
- Mark Sweney (29 May 2014). "Future Publishing to cut more than 200 jobs and sell sport and craft titles". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 December 2014.