Riders
Marshall "Major" Gehrke
Expert
7
NAG
Class
National Age Group
National Age Group
- Age
- 17
- Hometown
- Antioch, IL (USA)
- Track
- Waukegan BMX
Following
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My name is Joe"Brownie Man Sprague, and I ride for Albe's Bike Shop.I race in 36-40 inter after I celebrate my birthday in March. I also bake and sell brownies to pay for my racing.
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I am a 7 year old BMX Rider. I love to ride at the track or at the local skate park!!! Check me out on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/MordechaiYadegarII Biography When I am not riding at home or at the local skate park you can find me at the nearest track. I am a 7 year old Expert Rider trained by Hall of Fame Inductee Turnell Henry & X-Pro BMX Racer Tommy Stauffer/Team Torque Training. I am sponsored and ride for RRC-FLY-Supercross. http://supercrossbmx.com/ http://www.flyracing.com/ Additional Sponsors Speedline BMX Components - http://www.speedlineparts.com/ Bike Worx - http://vegasbikeworx.com/ or https://www.facebook.com/vegasbikeworx Team Torque Training ProLine Electric Snail MotorSports - http://snailmotorsports.com/ or https://www.facebook.com/snailmotorsports
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MÄris Ć trombergs (born March 10, 1987 in Valmiera, Latvia) is a professional BMX racer - hailing from Latvia but currently living in Murrieta, California. In the 2008 Summer Olympics (held in Beijing, China), Maris became the first Olympic champion in BMX cycling. Earlier that year, heâd won the 2008 UCI BMX World Championships - also held in China. By doing so, Maris became the first Latvian-born Olympian to ever win a Gold medal - instantly boosting him up to Superhero status in his home country. Four years later, he prolonged his Olympic title by winning the gold medal in the 2012 London Olympic games - completely dominating the main event, and doing a great job of holding off Sam Willoughby for the win. Upon returning from the 2012 Olympics, Strombergs was greeted by thousands of fans in his hometown Valmiera - and whenever he visits back home in Latvia, he is a huge recognizable, sports celebrity.
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Since a very young age, Australian Sam Willougbyâs dream had been to race in the USA and become the No.1 Pro. Itâs been a long and tedious journey - one that he has worked very hard to achieve. Incredibly, heâs made it come true. In fact, that dream has come true three times so far. While working his way to the top of the Australian ranks, Sam became the first rider to win back-to-back Junior World Titles (2008 and 2009), before moving up to the Elite ranks. It was in 2010 - now with full factory support from Redline Bicycles, that Sam won his first No.1 pro title in America. His soaring 2011 results helped pull Australia to the highest ranked BMX nation - and Sam capped things off with a UCi World Championship; only three months out from the London Games. Full of confidence, Willoughby made his Olympic debut in London where he would again tackle the worldâs best, and did his best to chase down Latviaâs Maris Strombergs. Sam wound up with a silver, for his first Olympic try - and upon returning to his new home in the U.S., proceeded to win another National No.1 Pro title in USA BMX. 2013 could very well be Samâs best year ever; as he kicked off Day 2 of the Winternationals with a AA-pro win and wouldnât stop winning until 13 races later. Sitting out Southpark to prepare for the Worlds, officially ended Samâs win-streak, but he would start a new one with a late-season charge of 5 consecutive wins, clinching yet another No.1 Pro Championship. His 13-consec win-streak would shatter the previous Pro record, held by John Purse - and his 18 Win total for the year places him in 2nd place for âmost winsâ in a season. While the 2013 Cup was his third ever, his 2-in-a-row feat places Sam in good company - joining Brian Patterson, Gary Ellis, Pete Loncarevich, Christophe Leveque, Warwick Stevenson and Bubba Harris. While Sam surely has nothing else to prove - and has already put his name in the BMX history books, heâs definitely not done dominating the sport. There was a lot on the line in 2014: Could Sam tie Bubba Harrisâ lone record of 3-in-a-row? At the same time, would he put a 4th No.1 Cup in his collection amd add his name alongside Ellis and Loncarevich as the only 4-in-a-lifetime Pro Champions? Sam went to Tulsa looking like the favorite - winning the 2014 ROC, but was struggling a bit out of the gate in a couple of races. Unfortunately, a bad gate start in the all important Grands semi forced Sam to make up some ground from mid-pack, and while in the 4th place transfer spot he would up casing the berm-jump and going OTB. His weekend, his year and his quest for a record-setting No.1 Pro title was no over. In 2015, Sam is again on target for the No.1 title - and we'll find out in November if he can earn himself a 4th No.1 Pro championship.
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Despite being one of the best female BMX racers in the U.S. back in 2008, Alise Post was denied a spot on the Olympic team because, at age 17, she was too young. At the time, the age minimum for an Olympic BMX racer in 2008 was 19. The young BMX star from St. Cloud, Minn., who was accustomed to racing at the sportâs top level, was forced to witness BMXâs pinnacle event from afar. To distract herself from the disappointment, Alise spread herself thin across three sports: BMX, gymnastics, and track and field, while maintaining a 4.0 grade average. Throughout her years, Alise has accomplished plenty: Multiple NAG No.1 titles in ABA 2001 ABA National No.1 Girl 2003 ABA National No.1 Girl Cruiser 2004 ABA National No.1 Girl Cruiser 2006 ABA National No.1 Woman Pro 2006 Golden Crank Rookie Pro of the Year 2007 ABA National No.1 Woman Pro Yet, the Olympic dream was still at the top of her list. Overcoming injuries and fresh competition brought new challenges to her. By the end of 2009, Post was back among the worldâs best. Once she became eligible for the 2012 Olympic Games, Alise took her BMX dedication to a whole new level - training with Australiaâs Sean Dwight. Upon graduating high school in 2009, Alise retired from gymnastics and track and field in order to relocate â at the invitation of USA Cycling â to the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, CA.. Although she remained busy by continuing her education as a full-time student at the University of San Diego for the 2009-10 academic year and by increasing her involvement on the BMX World Cup circuit, she saw big improvements in the beginning of 2010. As a result, she resolved to narrow her focus yet again by making the difficult decision to take a break from college and completely dedicate herself to racing. Within months of this decision, Alise claimed a place as the top-ranked American, both nationally and internationally, by taking third place at both her first Elite World Championship, and at a World Cup race on her home track in Chula Vista. A true competitor, the 5â2â, 120 lb. Post overcame yet another injury and was back on her bike in time to successfully defend her USA Cycling national championship title in the spring of 2012 and wound up making her Olympic dream come true - as she was chosen for Team USA and set to head to London. The London Olympic games has its ups and downs, as all of Minnesota and the BMX World were cheering her on. A crash in the semi KOâed her for a second or two, and in front of the World stage, she insisted on crossing the finishline with her bike - albeit, a bit wobbly and discombobulated. It was an unfortunate way to finish off her chase for a medal - but she already has her sights set for Brazil in 2016.
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2012 USOC Olympic Trials winner 2012 U.S. Olympic Team member 2013 UCI BMX World Champion Time Trial 2013 UCI BMX World Cup Elite Mens Winner 2013 UCI BMX World Cup Time Trail Winner 2013 RedBull Revolution Winner
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Owner / Organizer / Team Manager of "The Nationals" Factory & Trophy BMX Racing Teams. #1 USA BMX Trophy Team in 2013 as well as Grands Trophy Team Winner.
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My name is Bobby Wasabi Connelly. I started racing February 2012. I race for Answer/Rennen I am a 9 years old expert working on some titles... I took the #2 plates in our state in class and number #1 plate on my cruiser. Also I took the ROC #1 plate on my cruiser and I'm NAG #5 in class and NAG #2 on my cruiser. I had a blast this past year and look forward to a new team and family going into 2016.
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Lucas is a Brazilian rider who had in 2015 his first races in US. It was an amazing experience for him, he found the fastest riders and greatly improved his level. At 2016, his first full session, Lucas got the NAG 9 with suport of the SSquared Factory Team. Ridind for Throdwn Lucas got NAG4 in 2017 and NAG2, W2 boys and W2 Cruiser in 2018. Looking forward for 2019 season, some changes are hapening, but the same desire for riding hard!
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Iâm busy being a BMX Mom of 3 crazy boys!
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Brandon Crain started racing at age 5-1/2. My dad turned me expert on my 7th b-day. I worked hard and trained hard and won my first NAG 1 title at age 8 2012 grands. I have a NAG 1 title in 2013 9 cruiser. My goal is to win a national title this year.
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