An MTB Girls Magazine Cover Story | By Liz Donahey, Editor-in-Chief
Melisa Rollins powered her way to 3rd overall in the 2025 Life Time Grand Prix through unwavering grit and consistency, highlighted by incredible finishes at Sea Otter Classic, Leadville 100 MTB, Chequamegon MTB Festival, and Big Sugar Gravel and Little Sugar MTB
On a spring afternoon in Utah, a teenage Melisa Rollins lined up for her very first NICA race. It was prom night. She slid out, bloodied her arms, and still went to prom anyway. “I don’t even remember if I finished that race,” she laughs now. “But I do remember going to prom with road rash.”

That moment might have signaled the end of mountain biking for many. For Melisa, it was just the beginning.
Today, she is one of the top female endurance racers in the United States, with a résumé that includes a victory at the Leadville Trail 100 MTB in 2024, a second-place overall finish in the 2024 Lifetime Grand Prix series, and podium-level results across gravel and mountain biking’s biggest stages.
But the story of Melisa Rollins is not about overnight success. It is about consistency, resilience, and the courage to show up again and again.

From College Athlete to Endurance Racer
Unlike many pros, Melisa did not grow up racing bikes. In fact, she did not really fall in love with cycling until college.
“I stopped exercising completely for the first two years of school,” she says. “But I missed it. I missed being active.”
Her family, lifelong cyclists, encouraged her to try again. And they did not just ease her in. They signed her up for the Leadville 100, one of the most iconic and grueling mountain bike races in the world.
“I went from zero to hero,” Melisa recalls. “With almost no background in cycling, I trained for eight months with my parents as my training partners. It became a family affair.”
She finished her first Leadville at just 21 years old, placing somewhere in the 40s. Five years later, in 2021, she climbed to 6th place. By 2024, she would win it outright.
“Leadville was a turning point for me,” she says. “It was unexpected, but it changed the trajectory of my career.”

Lessons from the Pool
Before bikes, there was swimming. And for Melisa, that background gave her one of her greatest assets: pacing.
“Swimming taught me patience and endurance,” she says. “I was a distance swimmer. The monotony of staring at that black line on the bottom of the pool, it is not so different from the long hours of training for cycling. Both require discipline and the ability to understand effort levels—what 80% feels like, what 90% feels like.”
That steady mindset carried her through long races like Unbound Gravel 200, a 10-hour ride through Kansas prairies, and even a 100-mile ultramarathon run at Leadville, which she finished in 34 hours.
“I do not think of myself as superhuman,” Melisa insists. “I just dive into things without letting fear stop me. Once you are in it, you figure it out.”
The Lifetime Grand Prix Journey
Melisa’s rise in the Lifetime Grand Prix, the premier mixed-discipline endurance series in North America, shows just how far grit can take you.
2022: Her rookie year, she placed 10th overall, anchored by a single standout 3rd-place finish.
2023: She took the season off from the Grand Prix.
2024: She returned with a focus on consistency and delivered—finishing second overall and winning Leadville.
“What I learned is that you cannot focus on the overall too early,” Melisa explains. “You have to let things fall into place. Every race is a new race. Even if one goes badly, you can turn it around at the next.”
She calls it a lesson in hope. “In a long race, you will hit 10,000 highs and 10,000 lows. But the lows always end. If you fuel, stay smart, and keep moving, you will come out of it. That is mental toughness.”
2025 Life Time Grand Prix: A Season of Grit, Fight, and Podium Glory
Melisa’s 2025 campaign became her most complete and consistent season to date. Beginning with a strong 5th-place ride at the Sea Otter Classic Fuego XL, she built momentum into summer and delivered a remarkable 2nd-place finish at the Leadville Trail 100 MTB, reaffirming her dominance at altitude.
She then surged into the front of the overall standings with a spectacular win at the Chequamegon 40, followed by a determined 15th at Crusher in the Tushar—a race that tested every rider’s limits.
In the final block of the series, Melisa delivered under pressure, finishing 3rd at Little Sugar MTB and sealing her overall podium fight heading into the series finale.
Big Sugar Gravel delivered a dramatic twist: torrential rain forced organizers to shorten the traditional 100-mile route to a high-speed, mud-slick 50-mile showdown. Melisa adapted instantly, fought in the front groups all race, and crossed the line 13th, securing her place as one of the most consistent and versatile riders in the series.
Melisa Rollins finished 3rd overall in the 2025 Life Time Grand Prix—her most complete Grand Prix season yet.

Handling Pressure with Humility
This summer, Melisa returned to Leadville as the defending champion. The pressure was enormous.
“Anytime I was in town, I felt it,” she admits. “But when I was with my people, I reminded myself I am just like everyone else. I too have been to Leadville for the first time, with no expectations. That helps me stay grounded.”
Melisa’s humility is as striking as her results. “At the end of the day, I want to be known as a favorite in every race—not just at altitude, not just in one discipline. I want to learn how to be a competitor everywhere.”

Advice for the Next Generation
When asked what she would tell her younger self, or any aspiring rider, Melisa does not hesitate.
“Success does not happen overnight. Real success comes when you keep showing up—after bad days, after crashes, even after races where you want to quit. This is a sport that rewards people who keep showing up with a level head.”
She sets process goals instead of outcome goals. “Winning is not something you can always control. But you can control whether you were the best version of yourself. That is a win.”
What’s on the Radar for Melisa?
For Melisa, the second half of 2025 was packed with intensity and challenge:
- Chequamegon 40
- Gravel Nationals in Minnesota
- Little Sugar MTB
- Big Sugar Gravel
“You have to be adaptable in the Grand Prix,” Melisa says. “One race is seven hours at 10,000 feet, another is two hours at sea level. You need to sprint, climb, and endure.”
It is a test of versatility, and Melisa thrives on it.

A Big Shoutout From Melisa
“Sending a big heartfelt shoutout to the entire community that’s been in my corner this season. Every cheer, every message, every quiet moment of belief, you’ve all played a part in keeping me moving forward. Riding with Liv has been such an incredible gift. This team has given me strength, opportunity, and a sense of belonging that fuels me on and off the bike. They show up for women in a way that’s real, intentional, and powerful, and I’m proud to wear their colors. To everyone who’s been part of this journey: thank you. You’ve pushed me, supported me, and reminded me why I love this sport. I carry your energy with me every time I roll up to the start line.”
Life Beyond the Bike
For the first time, Melisa is dedicating a full year to racing without balancing a full-time job. “It is refreshing,” she says. “I get less sick, I can recover better, and I have time to cook and live life.”
Her post-race rewards are simple—cooking creative Asian fusion bowls at home or attending concerts; she saw Chris Stapleton after her Leadville win.
“It is a simple life, but I love it,” she says.
Closing Thoughts
Melisa Rollins’ journey—from crashing at her prom-night race to winning Leadville to standing on the 2025 Lifetime Grand Prix podium—shows that greatness is not about perfection. It is about persistence.
As she puts it:
“Every single person in these long races will face adversity. What matters is that you keep showing up, and that you believe the lows will end.” That philosophy does not just win races—it inspires a new generation of women to chase their biggest, scariest goals.
Proudly supported by Liv Cycling





