Team ÃÛÌÒÊÓÆµappcross country mountain bikers finished the BC Cup series in style at Mount Washington Aug. 30 and 31 as Mo Lawrence and Maia Kilby placed first to earn U17 male and U15 female Provincial Champion titles.Meanwhile, downhiller Miranda Miller finished second in the last of six BC Cup races, and was named overall female BC Cup downhill winner. And Lauren Rosser proved she can do it all by placing second in junior 15-18 female cross-country and downhill competitions.Lawrence, 15, was excited to win the coveted BC Cup jersey in the final race. The course featured steep climbing and technical downhill sections."I loved it. You could go all out on the climbs and have lots of fun on the downhills. It was really rooty and pretty flowy. It was a good course for me," said Lawrence, adding that he stalked the leader for the first two 6.4-km laps waiting for him to make a mistake. "He crashed on the second lap and I went by and he never caught me."While the win earned Lawrence the official Provincial Championships title, he placed third in the overall standings because he missed two of six races by choosing to compete at the National Championships in Quebec, where he placed sixth out of 76 U17 riders.With his local BMX training, Lawrence said he's sure he'll be an even greater force to be reckoned with at next season's National Championships when he'll be one of the older U17 racers. "I'm super confident. I'd like to win Nationals [] I'm just going to have fun at the high school races and use them to have fun training."Lawrence's father Chris Lawrence won the Citizen Men 30-plus category unopposed. Next year, he plans to race as a licensed Masters rider to earn BC Cup points. Miranda Miller, who finished fourth at the Junior World Championships, is also hitting the local BMX track to improve her conditioning. "It's pretty good for cardio because it's full out sprints." Miller intends to compete in next year's World Cup Series. As a 19-year-old it will be her first year racing pro. In the meantime, she will continue to train with Shaums March and Mad March Racing while working hard to put money toward the $20,000 needed to fund the World Cup season.