BMX - Biking
BMX bikes are a special kind of low bike, with smaller
wheels than normal, that can be used for racing. They are
designed to be very light weight but also very robust, as well
as streamlined for speed. They are also known for being easier
to perform tricks with than normal bikes.
BMX stands for bicycle motocross, which refers to the origin
of the sport: children saw motocross races on the TV in the
‘70s and wanted to emulate them. Since they had no motorbikes
of their own, they used their bicycles to race around similar
dirt tracks to the ones they had seen. Today the sport is
notable for being one of the few sports that is taken part in
almost exclusively by the under-10s. Although there are a few
older professional BMXers, most good ones move on to other
cycling or motorcycling sports.
Among children today, BMXes remain one of the most popular
kinds of bikes around, even if they do not compete in
competitions, and BMX magazines are some of the biggest-selling
hobbyist magazines. This was a surprise to many, as the sport
was considered pretty much dead in the ’80s and early ‘90s,
only to undergo a dramatic revival in the mid-‘90s that is
still going on now.
BMX is now one of the range of extreme sports like
skateboarding and snowboarding, and similar tricks can be
performed with the bikes to the ones the boarders do. The sport
of Freestyle BMX was invented to allow BMXers to concentrate on
doing tricks in skate-parks instead of racing, and has since
arguably outgrown the popularity of BMX racing altogether –
this is the style that the most famous BMX bikers, Mat Hoffman
and Dave Mirra, compete in.
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