X games 2012 direct tv
If you cancel your subscription or if it lapses for some reason, you will lose access to the game. However, if you subscribe back up, you will gain access back to the game and every other free game downloaded courtesy of your subscription. As Wario64 points out over on Twitter, the freebie is actually available through Xbox Games with Gold Brazil, however, you don't need to make a Brazil account to cash in on the offer. ESPN was smart to set up all the best events and their finals on the final day of the tournament so that fans at home could make sure they were safely secured by their television.
Nothing says Sunday like extreme sports. Not only will X-Games fans have two skiing finals on Sunday, they will also have two superpipe snowboard finals as well as the best trick competition for the snowmobiles. Full Schedule. How do you see it progressing and where do you see it going? Bestwick : Vert riding in my eyes will always be the one that influences so many parts of what makes up BMX riding. You only have to look at a lot of BMX edits and contest runs to see how vert riders and their tricks have given people direction and have had a direct impact on how many park, dirt and street riders choose to link their tricks together.
I also like to think that BMX is a huge melting pot and we all have a direct influence on each other. Who inspired you the most to ride vert when you were growing up? The colors, the bikes the tricks and style made you want to just get a bike and ride. I then saw a quarterpipe demo by Mike Pardon and Andy Preston that literally blew me away. I saw Dave Slades ride after that and he was the perfect mix of USA flamboyancy and balls-out stupidity on a pink bike -- that sealed the deal for me.
I was hooked on ramp riding. Over the years, it's been a real mix. Then, the years of Mat Hoffman in his prime were amazing. I saw him demo in the U. The winner of the contest he was at got to ride with him in a demo after the contest. I rode so hard to win that event, tried and nearly pulled my first I won the comp, rode the demo and copped a lot of crap from people, but I sat on the opposite side of the deck as Mat pulled his first flair.
Dave Mirra was a huge inspiration as well. His riding was effortless and his ability to save tricks was unbelievable. I think a lot of people fail to see the impact he has had on BMX. While Mat's was plain to see, Dave's impact was like his riding -- smooth, big and impeccably well done! And to this day he is still defining what can be achieved in action sports.
Dew Tour just cut back on the amount of stops they're doing this year. What are your thoughts about that? They are growing with the changes our sport is demanding. The five-stop tour was great and really helped promote action sports to the mainstream in a way that no one had done before. But times have changed again and riders and fans are looking for something a little less unrestricted. They want to see the very best in the sport put it all on the line in a stand alone event. Strategy is sometimes a factor in five events, and staying healthy is one of them.
A stand alone event will encourage riders to go for broke, and quite possibly we'll see their dream riding laid down, which can often be the downside of a series. X Games, on the other hand, is expanding and doing global events for Are you excited about that? I think it's great. X Games have already seen that what they have done in China and Brazil have been successful and have worked.
This is the next step in their own progression. I'm sure many questions will be raised, but regardless it gives riders yet another opportunity to fulfill their dreams of riding in the X Games, especially those from the chosen host countries. This in turn may be a catalyst to start a new generation of BMX riders and may be a way for the Olympic committee to see our sport in action.
It seems like the competitive edge of riding vert has caused a rift in your friendships with other pro vert riders such as McCann and Kagy. What is your take on that? Something we all have in common is that we ride a competitive sport. My competitiveness has always been the same -- and it always will be. I enjoy riding my bike and I get on my bike to live out my dream of being the best I can be and channel my efforts into something so creative as BMX bike riding is to me.
I am pretty much my own biggest competitor. We all have the same goal, and that is to be the best at what we do. We all speak to each other, have a laugh on the deck and have grabbed the odd beer or bite to eat together in the past, whether at a contest or not, and that's about it. But at the end of the day, we get off the ramp and we all go our separate ways, much like any sport really.
I have different interests off the ramp, but the bike, contests and Woodward brings us all together at similar times. I think people perceive things to be other than they really are. People like to create stories, whether true or not and I feel like I'm going over the same ground again and again.
But at the end of the day none of it matters. Maybe there's a misconception that because we share the deck of the ramp and we are acquaintances, then we share much more of our lives -- but for me this isn't the case.
0コメント