Was the Guadalajara stop your first Pro Cup?
Yes. It was great. I don’t know if you could have picked a better location with more locals genuinely stoked on all these pros being here at their hometown. I know people drove from all over Mexico to be here. For Vans to come out and do something like this, it's really special. Not only for myself, but also for the Mexican community. I’m stoked to be a part of it.
You’ve been to your share of comps over the years; how are the Pro Cups different?
I think it’s just the atmosphere -The locals bring so much to it. The bowl in Guadalajara is not easy to ride. This one is a lot more challenging. It makes it special where you have to think about it a little more.
How was it riding with the locals?
You come down here and you realize a lot of these guys don’t have the means to travel much. To be here in their home country and for them to be shredding was awesome. They have the park wired; it was really fun to watch.
How was it being the oldest guy at the Guadalajara stop last year?
It happens really fast. I was typically the youngest guy when I started competing. Now I’m the old guy. I’m just happy I’m still around to appreciate it, and I’d like to think everyone treats me like another bike rider. That’s all it is, young, old, whatever ethnicity, we’re all here for the same reason. I might get a little more tired faster. (Laughter)
Being a regular at all the crazy concrete parks in Pittsburgh, how do you like concrete courses as opposed to say wood courses?
I treat them differently. Concrete is more relatable to trails, and that’s what I grew up riding, and what I love to ride the most. I just love flowing around and trying to keep my speed, don’t pedal too much, and try and throw some tricks in there.
If you were spectating at a comp, who would be your dream group to watch?
When I was 14 years old, I went to a contest in Greenville, and Colin Winkleman and Dave Mirra were there. I’d never seen riding like that in my own eyes; it was the coolest thing I’d ever seen. It would be rad to see those guys session again. That’s the nostalgia part of me. Dream riders to watch at a concrete park - Chase Hawk, Mike Aitken, Sergio, Tom Dugan- because you never know what’s going to happen (with Tom); it could be the biggest thing you ever seen or could be the biggest slam. All those guys are top shelf in my book.
You’ve always been a varied-terrain rider who has stayed away from trends; do you see a resurgence of the all-around rider?
I think so. Especially coming to one of these comps, you see all these guys, and they can shred anything. I think there is a resurgence of riders who enjoy riding anything; younger guys like Dennis Enarson. It’s getting to that point where it’s not as segregated as it maybe once was a few years ago.
Where you like to see any stops go down?
At my local park, which is three miles from home. (Laughter) I would love it if they did it like a five-stop series. I went to Canberra, Australia; there are so many insane riders there. Hastings park in Vancouver would be sick. Salt Lake City – the Sandy park.
Do you think contests like these get kids psyched on bowl riding, which might help promote everything in BMX in general?
Yeah, definitely. It gets people stoked. At this point in BMX, where it’s kind of on a low swing, it gives kids something to watch and look forward to, even if it’s on their phones. I think things like these are really important.