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Battle at the Beach Presented by 4130 Products Myrtle Beach, South Carolina June 4 & 5, 2005
Battle at the Beach was the first major flatland contest in the U.S. this year; so, people have been looking forward to this event for a long time. I was definitely one of them. I flew in late the night before the contest and when I landed I found out that my bags and bike were in Washington DC. Although I was not stoked with this news, when I arrived at the hotel things started looking up. The hotel was super nice and was attached to the convention center where the contest was held. It was like a flatland utopia. The riding area in the convention area was huge and flat. These polished concrete floors are typically slick, but this one was nice and gripy. After eying Eugene’s Momentum, just in case mine didn’t show, I called it a night.
The next morning I went back to the airport to check on my bike. Luckily, when I walked through the door I almost ran into a guy pushing my bike and bag over to the ticket counter. I went back to the hotel, put my bike back together, ate some breakfast buffet with Cory Fester, and hit up the practice session. A few hours later, it was time for the AM class prelims. There was a nice AM turnout, 25 riders total. I was a judge, which seems to get harder every time. These AM riders are just so darn good these days. One thing that was easy was qualifying Stephen Hearn in the number 1 slot. Cross-footed backpacker turbined to hitchhikers and the faster blenders EVER were just a few of the moves that Stephen was busting. Anthony Brogden rode awesome and made the cut, but since he was one of the guys running the comp, he withdrew from the comp and gave his spot up for the rider in 13th place. What a nice guy!
Next, they had a quick best trick comp for the Ams. Needless to say, Stephen Hearn walked away with a brand new frame for his efforts. Once Stephen got his frame, they called over John Young and told him to bring his bike. Sick Child donated a frame to the contest, but Ed wanted it to go to the guy with the ugliest bike. John’s beat up Quamen did the trick; he walked away with a brand new anti-freeze green Sick Child. Pro prelims were next.
As luck would have it, the Worlds were scheduled for the same weekend as Battle at the Beach, so I think everyone was a little worried that this would hurt the turnout. But, there was a nice turnout for Pro; 18 riders total. There were veterans, first time pros, new school riders, old school riders, and middle school riders! The prelim was amazing. I was glad that I was not a judge for this one. Everyone was going off! Nestone Favero, Mickey Gaidos, T.J. Perry, and Corey Fester all just missed the cut, but did some incredible riding. Justin Miller and Terry Adams just got back from the Asian X-Games where Terry took 1st and Justin took 2nd. They were battling it out again in South Carolina, but this time Justin qualified 1st, and Terry was right behind him. Trevor qualified in the 3rd place spot. It was good to see Trevor back in competition again. The finals were Sunday and the AMs were up first. Once again, the AMs were off the hook. Carey Matthews was doing it for the South Riders and earned 5th place with a bunch of awesome switches and 360 barflip side squeaks. Eric Effinger rode flawless in the prelims with endless front wheel barflips. He had a few touches in the finals, but his tricks were solid enough to land him 4th. Bob Walters provided a little comic relief and some original moves. He rode out with sunglasses and red devil horns on his head. He also did a decade holding the head tube!! Bob got a well deserved 3rd place. Stephen Hearn broke his front axle at some point during his run, so he didn’t hit all of him bombs in the finals. However, he did plenty to earn that 2nd place slot. Isaiah Jordan slid under the radar in the prelims, but he came out on fire in the finals!! If I remember right, I don’t think he even touched. He put together all kinds of fast, flowing front wheel links that earned him 1st place hands down! The coolest thing was that the top 3 all got frames! The top 12 all got a ridiculous amount of loot. The final
event of the weekend was Pro finals. There was such a good vibe at
this contest. Everyone seemed to be riding for the fun of it and
nobody seemed too stressed. This always makes for great riding.
Here is a quick sentence about each rider. I can’t do the riding
justice with words, but I’m sure video will be all over the internet by the
time this posts. Eugene Collins had a little trouble in the finals,
but he did his signature time machine pumps with a full pedal and came super
close to a crackpacker kickflip! Chad Johnson rides with no brakes,
but This was the first event that 4130 Products has ever done, but man was it awesome. A huge thanks goes out to Anthony, Shawn, and Scott for doing such a great job! These guys had every detail covered. Sounds like they will be having it again next year. Just tell me where to sign up and I am there. Oh, by the way, the hub for Hooters airlines is based in Myrtle Beach, so if you don’t go next year, you are crazy!
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Photo by: Art Thomason |
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