We're excited you want to ride with us! If you are a new rider, welcome to the family! If you are experienced, we are glad to have you back. Please select below:
Riders
Brayden Fritz
Following
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Hi my name is Conner i have been racing since october of 2022. i am expert. my local track is (st.peters bmx) i cant wait to keep racing for many more years to come. i ride and support granada cyclery
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I started racing as a kid in 1988 to 1992. Got back into racing in 2013 and I am having a blast with it as an adult!! Highlights in 2013: 2nd in District-Cruiser 2nd in State-Cruiser 2nd in Gold Cup-Cruiser Highlights in 2014: 3rd in District-Cruiser 1st in State-Cruiser Highlights in 2015: 1st in Gold Cup-Class 1st in State-Cruiser Highlights in 2016 16 in District-Cruiser 39 in District-Class Highlights in 2017 2nd in State-Cruiser 4th in District-Cruiser 33 in District-Class Update: 2018-State #1 2019-State #2 2020-State #1 and Gold Cup #3 2021-State #2 and Gold Cup #1 2022-State #2
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My name is Barry Nobles, They call me the Alabama Slama’. I ride for DK Bikes. If you ever see me at a race, don’t be scared to come up and say wad up!
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Donny Robinson is currently the eldest AA-pro in our sport - having turned Pro in 1999. His moniker is “dR” (his initials), often followed by 10 (his UCi career number. According to Wikipedia, the use of the lowercase “d” for his given name is perhaps related to his relatively diminutive physical size. Always small in stature, since a very young age, Donny was always the smallest child in his age group. But what he missed out on in size, he far made up for it in heart, drive and determination. On June 25, 2008, Robinson was chosen by Mike King, team director of the 2008 USA BMX Olympic Team, to represent the U.S.A.. His teammates at the 2008 Beijing debut were Jill Kintner, Mike Day, and Kyle Bennett. His Olympic dream was realized at least in part when he came in third at the Summer Olympics winning a Bronze Medal; avoiding a pileup that saw South Africa’s Sifiso Nhlapo take out nearly half the field. Since it was the sport’s debut and the Mens final was run after the women’s, he officially became the third American and the sixth person overall to win an Olympic Medal in BMX Racing. Throughout his career and often since Beijing, dR has gained a reputation of landing onhis head. A LOT. One of the toughest guys around, he admitted in late 2013 to suffering at least 25 concussions over the course of his career. In the same interview, he advocated for better concussion protocol at the lower levels of BMX racing. Donny’s great sense of rumor - mocking his own reputations as the “little, old guy with memory loss” has boosted dR’s popularity, and he always seems to be a fan favorite, drawing the most cheers from the crowd.