Where’d you grow up?
Fresno. I’ve been there my whole life until recently when I moved to Dallas. Fresno’s between Los Angeles and San Francisco, it’s an agriculture based town you’d say.
How’d you get into BMX? What was your first exposure.
When I was five my parents got me my first motorcycle, a little Honda Z50 and I started riding that like crazy up and down the neighborhood. They took me to a circle track race and I did pretty decent for first race and that got me hooked on two wheeled stuff. I started racing a lot. I always rode my bicycle normal and almost every racetrack would have a set of BMX dirt jumps. I’d see people riding their bikes jumping little crates with wood onto a dirt landing. I was always riding my bike, just trying to imitate what we were doing on the racetrack. It wasn’t till I was fifteen did I realize there were bicycle tricks. My friend showed me a bike video and that’s when I really noticed what BMX was. Up until then it was doing can-cans and no footers and no-handers. Everything that was dirt jumping.
Then I realized Fresno had a skatepark and so we started going at six in the morning. Slowly we started seeing more riders then… yeah. That’s when I noticed it. I didn’t know what BMX was till I was really old. I was just doing dirt jumps all the time. Seeing how far I could jump.
So you’re one of those motocross guys? That explains a lot.
Yeah.
So when you switched to BMX did it seem smaller? There’s the guys who jump massive doubles on a motorbike and they get on a BMX and they think ‘Oh it’s just a 25 foot jump.’
Yeah, when I look at a setup, everything in my head says it looks doable. The scale of things is way different. [On a] racetrack the average jump is 30 feet. So on a bike you’re used to that distance- it’s just a matter of leg power to get over it. That’s the real obstacle. But the fear thing, I think motocross definitely transitioned or helped that.
Were there any specific BMX riders who influenced the way you took your motocross background and applied it to BMX?
I mean, honestly in the beginning no. When it was me and my friends I didn’t have internet, no cell phone, nothing, and I didn’t own any BMX DVDs so it was pretty much just me and my group of ten friends backing each other up. But there wasn’t one thing I was watching over and over trying to imitate.
Back to the question, there were influential riders who changed the way I rode after I was jumping dirt jumps. When I began paying attention to BMX media it was 2007-09. Eddie C was my top influential rider. Sean Burns. Eddie solely cause his bike looked amazing. He made it look really good; the smoothness made me look at BMX thinking you could make it look really good. With Burns’ riding I could relate cause he could just do big stuff all the time. I thought it was the most BMX thing ever to me. He was roasting and making landings that were super hard look smooth. To me, Burns is insanely smooth.
He’s all about the art of landing. You’re not just a deadman jumping off a roof, there’s a technique just like there is to land on the back of a box jump.
Yeah, that was really cool to me.