| 
 CAN
      MARTTI DO IT AGAIN?On a hot sunny day in Los Angeles,
      the flatland riders all make it to the finals
 Photo
      Galleries:  Flat
      1 - Flat 2
      - Flat
      3 - Flat 4
       That's
      right, no qualifiers this year for the riders, it's just two sets of runs
      at 90 seconds each, just like the finals every year and just the way it
      should be.  Stephan started things off with a bang with what looked
      like just a couple of minor sketches, but his bomb tricks.  It seems
      like flatland riders are coming out with more and more bomb tricks every
      contest which just raises the level beyond belief for all the riders. Hiro
      didn't
      have his best run ever, but Travis Collier follows up with a few touches
      right away.  The riders have been complaining all weekend about how
      poor the surface is here.  No, nothing unusual really, just the same
      old wavy ground with a few bumps thrown in for good measure.  Travis
      busts out a really nice halfpacker combo with a barflip out which gets
      some people pumped up, but he just can't seem to shake the nerves combined
      with the bad ground to put up the solid run.  Thankfully it's not all
      or nothing this year and he has a second chance to put things together and
      redeem himself.  The best run is the only one that counts. The
      next rider up, Chad Johnston has been out all weekend in the 90 plus
      degree weather practicing his ass off.  Chad is by far the oldest
      flatlander to make it into the X-Games at about 35 years old.  He is
      not representing just the old guys, but those guys that make videos for
      fun as well,  Chad's In-Trik-At series of videos has been popular for
      years.  Chad's style seems to be based heavily on the nose wheelie
      but he steps things up by doing it all without brakes.  This includes
      pedal hang-5's and nose wheelies as well as nose wheelies on the rear
      pegs.  He uses the pedals more than the front pegs on stuff and
      throws down a solid rope-a-roni on the pedals... that is he rides IN
      standing on the pedals...  don't ask me how. Every
      year I like to remind people to try to ignore the typos here as I am
      typing this live as the tricks are going down.  I also always run the
      risk of being kicked out of my seating position which is well within the
      boundaries of where I am allowed to sit... oh well, we will see what
      happens. Heck, they are even
      keeping score as things are going on, I haven't been paying attention
      because what really matters is the final standings and the fun the guys
      have for the weekend...  York I'm not sure how much fun he has had,
      but as one of the most consistent riders ever, he raises the bar and gives
      Ares good representation.  He starts things off, brakeless as always,
      with some front wheel spinning his hang fives and steamrollers all get
      meshed together with a lot of tomahawk variations.  Ninety seconds
      later he has one touch as he tries to go into a no-handed wheelchair
      spin.  ONE touch...  the bar is raised. Michael
      Sommer is making his premiere this year at the X-Games after a outstanding
      performance at the CFB a few weeks ago.  His style doesn't seem to be
      affected almost at all by the ground.  Another rider with lots of
      front wheel combos, almost always spinning and rolling.  Halfpackers
      stepped over to other tricks with a crazy jump to the back pegs to ride
      out...  360 barflip to pedal steamroller, with a quick barflip to
      halfhiker out.  He finished things up with a cliffhanger 180
      barflipped to a spinning cliffhanger.  There were a couple of touches
      in his run, but not really much less than anyone else.  He adds a
      fresh face, and therefore a fresh style to the entire event. Perhaps
      one of the biggest names that people have anticipated at the Games was the
      addition of Jessie Puente to the roster.  We haven't seen him in a
      contest in years really, but there he is, riding for KHE and flowing with
      originality.  A quick time machine to start things off and then some
      rear wheel turbines to keep things going.  He passes the bike behind
      his back in a few stubble ducks while turbinging the bike, his stuff just
      doesn't make sense.  His root of the turbine combined with a lot of
      rear wheel stuff has got to put the judges into a different midn
      set...  He simple refuses to fit the mold, and after ninety seconds
      were up, it didnnt look like he gave in to the force of gravity long
      enough to put his foot down once.  This may be the run of the day,
      not his hardest stuff, but by far more original than almost any other
      rider.  No, not really, but definitely different than eveyrone else,
      and it doesn't seem like the judges truly appreciate it all. Aaron
      Behnke made the cut this year at the Latin American X-Games and has a
      styale that most of us know... slow, original tricks, not terribly long
      links, but usually combined in new ways.  Some love this style, some
      don't, but there can be no doubt that his stuff is hard.  The problem
      is that he just doesn't seem to be able to hold it all together for his
      first fun and gets a plague of touch downs that will hold him back, he
      must step things up with consistency if he wants to win. Now,
      don't think that flatland is all about touches and falls...  But
      really, with this many riders at such a high level, you have to look at
      touches and falls as one of the top scores.  This next rider has been
      blowing up for the last few years and has to be one of the favorites going
      in.  Viki Gomez didn't spend much time practicing in the last few
      days, but his run is something else.  Riding with Martti over the
      last year has influenced his style somewhat and he mixes trick up with
      pedal steamrollers and tomahwaks  barflpped to halfpackers and back
      again.  No, it doesn't make sense to me either.  Or the judges
      as they push him into first. Ryoji
      Yammamoto is the last rider in the first heat and then they will go
      through every rider again.  Yammer won the European X-Games and
      simply kicks ass when you watch him.  His halfpackers bar spun into a
      steamroller... huh?  He turbines steamrollers but then brings the
      frame around two or three times as he is spinning backwards to frwards and
      back again.  His style os fast and his spinning of the frame and the
      bike in conjunction, but in different directions sets him apart.  Not
      the same old front wheel bar flippity crap, no, just something fun to
      watch.  Fun for me, fun for the judges, and hard as hell... first
      place leader. Cerra starts up
      again and seems like he wants to raise the level of his riding some. 
      a no-footedwheelchair across the floor and vsome variations out.  He
      then comes back with a turbined wheelchair to a no footed tomahwak and a
      clean ride out.  He sets up and throws the steamroller to barflikp
      cross footed pedal steamroller.  It takes acouple of tries and he
      never quite hits it right.  He knows it's now what he wanted to do,
      and he won't be feeling the love from the judges on this one. Hiroyo
      Morisake is up again with a ghetto flip to upside down wheelie and a clean
      ride out.  Besides Yammer his stuff is probably the hardest of all
      the Japanese guys, and hie may also be in the position of being the most
      sketch of the riders that qualified from Japan.  Yet, he works both
      wheels of the bike and his inwards scuffing circle k's on the pedal.. is
      that right?  Either way, it was a huge jump from his first run and
      leaves him with a better score than before. Travis
      rolls onto the stage and does a quick 180 rollback witha  smoothie
      out...  He loves to ride and ahve fun.  Then the halfpacker
      jumped around the a steamroller and a few turbines and a clean ride
      out...  This may be his run.  Inside turbined hang-5 with both
      feet on the same side of the frame he lets the bike frame go around and
      catches it ina halfpacker.  No luck, it just isn't going to be his
      day but he will probably be the rider who had the most fun out here today. Chad
      comes out again with a rear peg hang 5 to a megaspin out.  His music
      is techno and dark... slow and solid stuff, but his riding just doesn't
      match.  He can't keep his tricks that he has totally dialed solid
      enough to win.  An inward pedal hang-5 turbined to kick back into
      forward hang-5 on the pedal.  It's fun stuff, but while crazy hard,
      he can't link it up and combo it up enough to make the judges happy. 
      Who cares?  He should be happy and keep riding for the love of it
      all. York is out again with a
      couple of jugglers to start things off, he then pulls it in to a hip pack
      and then around out to a steamroller.  He is working the entire front
      wheel in every direction from both sides and nails his first combo, which
      just ate up half his time.  He follows through with more front wheel
      combos and gets a good wheelchair spin going, but he can't hold on for a
      flawless run, and it may be the difference for him.  Either you have
      crazy hard tricks, or you have incredible consistency.  If you aren't
      going to step up the difficulty, you better not touch, and for York, this
      wasn't stepped up to the level he could have taken it to, or to what some
      other riders have been doing, so he will not do incredibly well, but he
      will do well. Michael Sommer
      is up again with a cross footed steamroller which he jumps around and
      barflips to a regular steamroller.  He keeps working the front wheel
      in different ways, but he isn't throwing down the bomb.  He is
      holding back hoping for some consistency, but the feet still come down a
      few times and at the end of the day he will go home with nothing better
      than third place - with some of the best still to come. Jessie
      is up again and this time he wants to step things up with a beautiful
      airwalk to start things off, you know, a inward no-footed circle K on the
      END of the bars which he kicks both directions.  Solid!  He
      takes a tme machine up and then rides out... can't do that at this
      event.  Jessie is either nervous or not ready, but now he goes into a
      multiple turbined backpacker to finish things off... he doesn't pull it
      and he will probably stick with his first run score. Behnke
      goes out with another stylishly slow run.  He blows up right away
      though which has got to play with his head.  A couple of touches and
      then a not-pulled the way he wanted to trick.  He pulls things
      together and puts a good rear wheel link up and a solid front wheel
      combo.  It still cost him several touches though and may not move him
      around much with scoring. Style,
      Viki just oozes style, that's all there is to it, his tricks are dope, his
      flair is big, and when he is on, he can bring down the best in the
      world.  When he is on.  Steamroller to cross handed steamroller
      tailwhipped around...  to nothing.  He can't finish the tricks
      that he is starting.  a cross ahnded steam to pedal steam to fork
      glide to pedal steam.  He's on and off the pedals so quick it's hard
      to follow.  But, this wasn't his first run and he had a few to many
      touches, it doesn't change his spot at second place, which is not a bad
      place to be if you gotta be somewhere. Yammer
      is out again and works the epdal with some steamrollers, turbined of
      course, to the front wheel and a clean ride out.  He sketches his
      next trcick and then drops the bike.  A steamroller barflipped to a
      halfpacker also results in the bike going down.  He begins his seires
      of spinning on the front wheel with the frame going one way as he spins
      the other way.  It takes two tries and he sketches a little on the
      ride out, so he'll probably stick with his first run.  Yeah, he's
      probably not complaining about that - first. There
      is about five minutes between heats which gives the other group of ten a
      chance to warm up.  It's hard to say how they determine which riders
      are in which heat, but with Nate Penonzek, Matt Wilhelm, Martti Kuoppa,
      Trevor Meyer, and Simon O'Brien in this second round... you gotta think
      that Yammer is not going to manage to hold onto that first place position
      for much longer. Marcos de
      Jesus made the cut again this year and starts it off with an upside down
      megaspin on the pedals that he combined into.  He rides fast... 
      very fast and loses it more often than any other rider out there.  I
      can't imagine a day when he is going to win a contest like this, but I
      also have very few riders that are more fun to watch do stuff just for the
      sheer speed and style that he has.  Lots of back wheel stuff, lots of
      front wheel stuff, and lots of speed. Manuel
      Prado was amateur last year... well that is the class he competed in
      anyway.  This year he's at the X-Games and his solid style with
      really hard tricks may be enough.  He works the back wheel with about
      every dump truck variation you can imagine including stepping it up to the
      pedal and pulling it around back into gerators and stubble ducks for a
      ride out.  A one minute combo hit flawless is just the way you want
      to start things.  A quick hitchhiker, not pulled like he wanted into
      a blender, but he does it agian, and this time he does it the way he
      wanted to.. kind of.  No, his feet never touched the ground, but the
      run wasn't flawless either. Did
      you know that Matt Wilhelm can spin on a bike?  Yeah, like no other -
      every trick is a tornado spin it seems like, but he also mixes it up this
      year with some halfpacker combos... kind of halfpacker pinky squeak
      things, they are dope.  He goes into a Karl cruiser to bunnyhop
      megaspin and then bunnyhop to the front wheel again and finishes it with a
      no-handed spinning Karl cruiser.  Now he steps up to his patented
      blender bike flip to the pegs, then the pedals with a upside down megaspin,
      but sketches when he tries to take his hands off while standing on the
      pedals.  Just one touch at the very end, but solid nonetheless. Simon
      O'Brien could win this, well, anyone could win this, but Simon won two
      huge events this year and has really, really hard stuff.  He starts
      off with a front wheel combo that includes a backwards wheelchair and
      links that just shouldn't be possible.  Clean.  Now a Karl
      cruiser to backwards halfpacker turned to a steamroller and then intoa 
      wheelchair and around the bars to out.  He steps up to ablender and
      sketches out.  He does it agian, and this time fips the bike similar
      to wilhelm and gets to the pedals where he spin them halfway and switches
      feet on the pedals.  No, if he isn't in first place after that run,
      the judges have been smoking something a little different than what they
      should be.  Terry starts
      off with a barflip to hithchiker and takes that through the paces for a
      long first combo.  He follows up with a steamroller jumped to the
      pedals and jumped back to the pegs.  Not as clean as he wants, but
      then comboed up some yet he sketches.  He does a steamroller then
      barflip jumps out to a hitchhiekr.  He begins working his way around
      the front wheel and comes out clean.  Terry finishes up with a pedal
      time machine with a few cranks in for good measure - not quite blenders,
      but dope. Penonzek is the best
      in the world...  if you look at contest results.  But he may
      truly be that.  His style is all about flow... one trick to the next
      turbining on the rear wheel or the front.  His first run included a
      lot of tear wheel work where he sun the bike under him no less than two or
      three times per combo.  He doesn't just get the bike under him he
      steps it up to the pedal and turbines things forward and backwards while
      standing up there.  He stubbvele ducks the bike INTO upside down
      wheelies instead of using it to ride out, he uses it as a ride in. 
      Like no other, he is about flow and it shows. Trevor
      Meyer is out to regain his title and with a run back with Giant (formerly
      GT) he may be able to do it.  The machines, the robot, the
      master.  He may be Yoda for all I know, but when he rides, he has
      some power that others just can't match.  A wheelie straight up into
      a pedal death truck into a blender stepped through toa a pedalling stick
      bitch.  Dude, he's tall.  He always seems to have some new stuff
      every year and it's hard to tell from year to year what is new and what
      tricks he has shown before.  A couple of sketches though in his first
      run may hold him back.  No, flawless just doesn't seem to be this
      year. Dolan is
      eternal...  That is, if he doesn't win a contest he usually isn't far
      behind the guy who did win.  His tricks are hard and evenwhen he
      isn't perfect, he isn't bad either.  A pedal rope-a-roni a pedal
      inward hang 5 froma  whioplasg combined into a hitchhiekr.  He
      sketched a little, but it is all really, really hard stuff.  the nose
      wheelies he does includes him cranking the pedals backwards as he goes and
      this year he is doing some different pinky squeak stuff where he does some
      jumps around the bars (not barflips) and kicks the front wheel in both
      directions to keep things interesting.  Steingrabber
      is such a nice guy, except this year the ground is just pissing him
      off.  Thatl, of course has no impact on his actual run which includes
      halfpacker whips and different combos up and around the bike and front
      wheel.  A lotof halfpackers this year are marking his style. 
      But, his first run wasn't what he wanted.  He will be back again in a
      few minutes. Martti is out for
      his first run on the new KGB frame, he starts off with typical Martti
      style,  Halfpacker kick flipped to halfpacker, but he starts to
      sketch.  If you were here you would know that he kept practice to a
      minimum and it may not payoff for him at this event.  A solid
      kickflipped Karl cruiser and combines up into a clean ride out.  A
      cross footed hiker didn't make the kick flip inot a hitchiker so he tries
      it again.  This time he lands sideways on the wheel... doesn't
      touch... but then completely falls on his ass trying to get out.  Not
      even close after the first run.  One more to go. Marcos
      is up again and works his first upside down megapsin combo at speed
      flawlessly.    He takes an inward scuffing tomahawk into
      his next trick but can't pull it clean.  Now a turbined death truck
      attempt gone wrong.  He hits the ground pretty hard and fast but gets
      up to try again and pulls it super solid clean.  He has those so
      dialed in!He tries a back yard to whoppper - yes, you read that correctly,
      he coasts a high speed backyard with both feet on the peg and turbines it
      through a circle.  On the turbine, he tries a whopper out. Manuel
      is up for flawless on his second run.  The same first combo on the
      rear wheel working it every which way.  He pulls it clean and comes
      back with the juggler to a time machine on the epdals pulled clean. 
      It's on now as he has his first two links done with flawless.  He
      flips the bike upside down and gets into a pedal stick bitch clean He is
      so solid it's scary.  Three combos of tricks, 2/3 on the rear wheel,
      and zero touches.   Matt
      is up to raise the bar and he starts off with a sketched halfpacker whips
      combo.  The trick is cool but he sometimes gets a little greedy with
      it.  Once again, front wheel to rear wheel to front wheel to no
      handed Karl cruiser, so is the blender flip going to happen?  This
      time he touches on the jump over and just can't hold onto it.  Just
      not his year for the flawless run and he doesn't show off either his
      no-handed upside down pedalling time machine or the millenium (forward
      time machine jump over to stick bitch). O'Brien
      does tricks so hard...  The jump over to backwards halfpacker is
      insane, and so easy it seems for him.  He's back up into a blender
      staright to the pedal kick flip to other pedal and down and out
      clean.  Now a backwards halfpacker kickflip to backward halfpacker
      and then kicked forward to a ride out.  The hardest trick in the
      world right now maybe and he does it in a contest.  He finishes it up
      with a boomerang to hang 5on the pedal. Terry
      barflips to hitchi8ker again and then works the front wheel with pinky
      squeakes, jumping the bars and side squeaks.  Maybe not the hardset
      stuff, but fast and solid.    The pedal steamroller jump
      once again didn't go the way he wanted it to but his links and combos to
      the ride out went so solid he's gotta be happy.  He goes through with
      a wheelchair to a totally sketched jump over to barflip witchhiker. 
      He tries again and sketches it again, but manages not to touch right away. Nate
      has got to be at least a little nervous, but maybe he just never feels
      that way.  He sure doesn't ride like he ever gets nervous.  The
      rear wheel is his love and he just rolled through a combo so smooth glass
      was jealous.  A cross footed ujpside down spinning megaspin...
      coasting... out of a gerator it all is so weird.  He keeps working
      only one wheel of the bike and then when the buzzer sounds he is off the
      contest floor and over the fence before the buzzer is even off. Trevor
      is up again on the front wheel with a cross footed steamroller to spinning
      cross footed hitchhiker he comes backout and does a boomerang over the
      frame and back into a steamroller, it's a huge jump and hekeeps working
      the front wheel until the ride out where he does a quick decade and calls
      it a trick.  Now he pedals back up into a death truck which he takes
      into a blender nice a smooth   This time it goes through to the
      pedalling stick bitch and then to the peg and out.  The buzzer sounds
      flawless to him. Not to be
      outdone Phil starts out on the rear wheel with a pedalling rope a roni. 
      He steps it up and keeps it going across the entire course and then pulls
      it up to the hang-5 on the pedals and keeps linking things up until he
      covered the entire course.  A nose wheele doesn't give him love
      though as he goes forward over the bars and has his only touch of the
      run.  Otherwise solid for his final run. Steingrabber
      starts on the rear wheel with a stubble duck to undertaker type job. 
      It's all brakeless and he never touches the trie, original linkup for
      him.  He starts working the rear wheel but sketches a little. 
      He then takes a backpacker to cross footed hiker and rides out
      clean.  He turbines a megapin and throws the decade ride out,
      brakeless people!  His final combo which he has been working on all
      day just didn't happen.  That's a backpacker pulled up and whipped
      into a halfpacker with some front wheel work and another backpacker out. Martti
      is not going to do it this year as he misses his first trick.  He
      then tries a cross footed hiker to 360 bike varial to cross footed
      hiker.  It doesn't happen the first try so he tries again and still
      doesn't lock it in.  This run though he hits the cross footed hiker
      to kickflip to regular hiker.  He finishes off with some crazy spins
      that he doesn't even come close to pulling off.  No, not his year. This
      year it's all about Simon O'Brien who brings home the gold for Australia
      and Nathan who followed behind closely, but not close enough.  Trevor
      finally made it back onto the podium and was very happy walking away with
      the bronze medal even though he probably felt he could have done
      better.  Further down the line there were riders who may not have
      done as well as they should have done - but with judging based on opinion,
      instead of hard fact, this is going to happen. We
      will probably see the top five riders in next years X-Games as
      pre-qualified athletes, while the rest will have to make appearances at
      events throughout the world next year if they want to be invited back to
      LA.  Expect most of them to show up, but also look for some new faces
      to try and appear.  Look for the guys that didn't make the cut this
      year, to step up and demand recognition through their skills next
      year.  As always, new guys will come and veterans will go, but there
      will always be riding so intense and hard that your jaw will drop as you
      see it. No, BMXTRIX can't
      present one second of video from the actual contest.  ESPN is very
      exact about that:  No video footage from ANY final runs may appear in
      ANY format ever.  I may need to call them and try to work something
      out with that for next year.  Especially if we only see 120 seconds
      of coverage on TV from an hour plus long event.  Simon...  you
      gotta see Simon's run.  
       
        
        
          
            | Simon O'Brien | 93.40 |  
            | Nathan Penonzek | 92.00 |  
            | Trevor Meyer | 88.60 |  
            | Ryoji Yamamoto | 88.00 |  
            | Jorge (Viki) Gomez | 86.80 |  
            | Phil Dolan | 86.20 |  
            | Stephan Cerra | 85.80 |  
            | Michael Sommer | 85.80 |  
            | Matt Wilhelm | 85.40 |  
            | Hiroyo Morisake | 85.20 |  
            | Jessie Puente | 84.20 |  
            | Michael Steingrabber | 84.00 |  
            | Terry Adams | 83.00 |  
            | Manuel Prado | 82.80 |  
            | York Uno | 81.80 |  
            | Chad Johnston | 81.40 |  
            | Martti Kuoppa | 79.80 |  
            | Aaron Behnke | 79.20 |  
            | Marcos de Jesus | 78.60 |  
            | Travis Collier | 77.80 |  |