X Games' safety a question as tricks get more dangerous

Saturday, 30 July 2011

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At X Games 17 on Thursday in downtown Los Angeles, Jackson Strong won the Moto X best trick contest with a trick no one had pulled off in that event's history: a front flip.

The Australian native had practiced it for three years on a dirt bike and landed it here in a gold-medal performance.

But soon after the event, he looked ahead.

"One day, somebody is probably going to be doing a double front flip on a dirt bike," Strong said. "I hope I'm not around when that happens."

The culture of action sports has long been for its athletes to push higher, harder, faster, farther.

At the X Games, the athletes push even more when competing against their sport's finest on their sport's biggest stage. Combine that culture and that stage, and serious injuries are bound to occur.

In the same event Strong won, action sports star Travis Pastrana suffered a broken right foot and ankle when he attempted a trick he has failed to complete for years.

Later Thursday night, BMX rider Chad Kagy fell from about 45 feet into a quarterpipe and broke his right femur.

These injuries represent a small sample size, but Bill Moore, a performance psychologist who has worked with dozens of athletes, said that given the culture of action sports and of the X Games, proper oversight is a must.

"If left to their own devices, athletes will continue to push it and suffer consequences down the line," said Moore, president of Moore Performance Consulting. "That is the culture of what these guys are coming from. What's happened is, the tricks have outgrown the culture."

Jamie Bestwick, who won his fifth straight gold medal in the BMX freestyle vert Friday, described how the games have changed.

"Years ago, you could pump the ramp and settle for one big trick and maybe win the contest," he said. "Now it's back-to-back-to-back, you're stringing big tricks with filler tricks and then going back to big tricks. It's really tough, and it's really easy to have a lapse in concentration."

Like all sports, the X Games is certainly much different from when it began, but Moore said it's unlike other sports.

"The difference with these guys is mistakes really matter," Moore said.

A small mistake can result in disaster, such as when Jake Brown attempted a 540-degree spin above the 27-foot tall quarterpipe wall in the skateboard big air competition in 2007.

Later, Brown said he was too far left as he approached the quarterpipe. He ended up plummeting from about 45 feet in the air onto the flat part of the ramp, a landing that could have killed him.

Scott Guglielmino, ESPN's senior vice president of programming and Global X, said that when an audience that isn't too familiar with action sports sees a crash, "they think that it's more inherently dangerous than it is."

"They're athletes, not daredevils," he added.

Nate Adams, who won the gold medal in Moto X freestyle Friday, agreed that athletes do think about their well-being, but said he competes in about 15 action sports events annually and none compare to the X Games in terms of pressure.

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