Come to Australia bro and teach us how to ride. I’m sick of getting jumped over by a 85 🥶
@cooganbeggs494229 күн бұрын
I hear you bro. It’s soul crushing 🤦♂️
@eamh200229 күн бұрын
First small trick is dont throttle in the jump, go static speed and if the nose dives, throttle on before you land. If the rear dives blip the rear brake :) Try to find a jump smaller than the big one and bigger than what youre doing. The surrounding area of jumps also makes it seem safer if the jump itself sits lower than the land around and not super high like a mountain giving you vertigo 😁
@MXRider-p8v25 күн бұрын
I am that 85cc i love and race in Australia.
@tylerlewis8478Ай бұрын
Love you videos man, helps me so much. Hopefully I can attend one of your classes in the Dallas Fort Worth area soon
@SEILLCАй бұрын
I like the progression. I used to teach this same progression, except with hook-turns while landing a parachute. Baby steps.
@themotoacademyYT29 күн бұрын
Creating a process 😁😁👍🏼
@wangzeng6050Ай бұрын
Thanks
@MX-CO27 күн бұрын
I saw a clip of Chad Reed recently talking to tate about jumping and he told Tate to over jump all the jumps slightly rather than trying to perfectly hit the downside, he said that by doing that you can focus on the next obstacle while putting no thought into the one your currently jumping
@Xx_schuyler_29729 күн бұрын
I was at Moto Academy in Washington Mitchell was nice I ride a 65❤❤😊😊
@boxinggloves8718 күн бұрын
You got my subscribe dude. Regards from UK 🇬🇧😎
@themotoacademyYT18 күн бұрын
Love it!
@19Jharris29 күн бұрын
I wanted to see the class do it!!!!!
@JStuck624Ай бұрын
wow, this is like a lightbulb going off for me. id never considered doing something like this to practice putting the bike where you want to. my scenario is slightly different but concept is still the same. 15 years off the bike, much older now and more careful jumping then i was. great way to practice judging speed and distance for sure.
@themotoacademyYT29 күн бұрын
This was actually one of the first days I incorporated this drill, but it seemed to click with many as an obvious way to build skill & confidence safely!
@TBMagicCat29 күн бұрын
He gonna keep making these videos and I am going to keep jumping wrong
@mixtips63718 күн бұрын
Same 😂
@eamh200229 күн бұрын
The condidence is hardest to build because you need to take baby steps from 1 to 100 and the real challenge is finding a way to do the in-between steps. When you get the feel of jumps and balance in air its all about confidence and figuring where to do a jump 1% bigger than last time. Same with tumbling. I learned my first backflip myself and it was super scary. I needed to land on my back and hands behind my back many times on a trampoline to finally have the courage to land on my hands doing a back handspring. Then I went taller and taller during months landing with straighter arms, then built strength to jump from a stiffer end of the trampoline so I could rely on my own jump and finally did a back handspring on grass hill with a soft woodchip pile under me. After months of handsprings I felt I can get high enough and pulled my hands out right before landing in a squat and BAM my first standing backflip. It was hundreds and hundreds of reps to get it done. I've lost my confidence to try it on a tramp now because its been 3years since last time on tramp and 6years since last tumbling arena backflip. First time I did the backflip was at 18/19yo and last time about 31-33, now I'm 37 :D When you do manual labour work you lose the courage to do crazy stuff but I can still jump a motocross bike and go nuts with speed 😂