Riders
Justin Travis
Vet Pro
Coach
22
NAT
Class
National
National
- Age
- 41
- Hometown
- Mount Gilead, OH (USA)
- Track
- Westerville BMX
Following
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I am a multi-sport athlete (BMX and Rowing), both have taught me many things. I hope I can spread a light for athletes with my great background in proper weight training and my BMX background.
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Matthew Silvia : - Vet Pro - Coach - 32 years experience Sponsors : - MCS - JDCycles - Tonys Bikes of Milford Accomplishments : - #1 Connecticut State Champion (6 times) - #1 ProOpen National Champion (yr 2000) - USABMX National Competitor (Vet Pro) - UCI Worlds Competitor (Masters) - UCI Supercross Competitor (Elite Men)
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After getting involved with BMX in 2005 with my son (David Rushing) we have been involved in all aspects of the sport since; 2011 Alabama State Vice President - NBL 2012 - 2014, Oak Mountain BMX Track President (Pelham, AL) 2013 - Current, Oak Mountain BMX Track Head Coach Team Manager: 2011 - Current, Crupi Team Green - South 2013 Bike Link BMX Team Licensed USABMX Coach: 2013 - Current Its been an exciting 10 years and definitely looking forward to the future.
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1982 – 1989 Started my BMX trek at 11 years old. Raced for teams; BEST, Kar City Big Wheels, Bike n Hike, Co-Factory Redline and GT. Held several #1 and #2 district numbers and top 30 overall national ranks. In late 1988 I turned pro, I raced a few pro races and joined US Marine Corps. In 1996 -2007 I returned to BMX. I rode for teams such as Outlaw Racing, Goodtimes Standard Byke, Strange Motion, DK support (RM59), Free Agent support. In 2003-2004 season I turned Vet Pro. While in Vet Pro I made top 10 in NBL, qualified and raced the 2007 Worlds in Canada. In 2008 I retired from competition and raced every so often. In 2012 I returned to BMX as an Expert with Factory Strange Motion/Kicker. In 2013 I obtained the Redline Cup #1 plate while riding for CCH bikes. In January of 2014 I turned Vet Pro again and rode for Factory (TFS) 24 Se7en. Currently I have the support of Strange Motion, Answer Bmx and FLY Racing. I currently have climbed onto a Stay Strong Frame and love it!!!!
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I am Jaime Nieto from Ecuador, South America and I am very happy being able to help bmx in the USA. I`m living in Orlando, FL BMX COACH CERTIFIED: UCI (Unión Cycliste Internationale), USAC Bmx Coach (USA Cycling) USA Bmx Coach, (USA BMX) COPACI (Confederación Panamericana de Ciclismo), USC (Unión Sudamericana de Ciclismo), FEDEC (Federación Ecuatoriana de Ciclismo), Azuay BMX Coach since 1999 Ecuadorian Bmx Coach High Performance Center CEDAR since 1999 Coach of Nationals, Panamericans, LatinAmerican and World Championships: USA Bmx Coach: Fountain City Bmx track 2012-2014 Oak Mountain Bmx Track 2012-2014 Orlando Bmx Track 2014
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I will make this short and sweet...... USA Cycling (USAC) Cretified BMX Coach USABMX Certified BMX Coach. I have 2 children that race, 11 Expert and 9 girls.
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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.
Racer Highlights
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