How It Started — 1989, Apple Valley, California
Supercross BMX wasn't built to be a brand first. It was built to get a great rider — AA Pro Billy Harrison — on a frame worthy of his ability. Before Supercross existed, founder Bill Ryan was running a company called Tech BMX Products, supplying number plates and racing pants to teams across the country. When Billy Harrison couldn't find a frame he was comfortable on, the decision was made: build one.
The name came at 2 a.m. during a phone call from a national. Billy Harrison called in and said he had it — Supercross. He and Greg Hill had been sitting around after the races, talking about what would make the best name for a BMX frame. It was settled that night. Billy Harrison never got to race it — a mountain bike accident ended his season before the first Supercross frame was finished — but the team concept was already too alive to stop.
From day one, the Supercross factory team operated differently. No "buy-in" programs. No selling factory jerseys to the highest bidder. Every rider on the team is a fully backed factory athlete. You are either part of the BMX family or you are not. That philosophy has held for 35 consecutive years.
The Riders Who Made It — Year by Year
Since 1989, Supercross BMX — based in Apple Valley, California — has maintained the only continuously active factory BMX racing team in history. This page is the most comprehensive Supercross BMX factory team history ever published: a complete year-by-year roster of every rider who has ever worn the team jersey, from AA Pro Billy Harrison in 1989 through the 2026 season roster featuring Olympic Silver medalist Kye Whyte, 2x Olympic Gold medalist Maris Strombergs, and UCI World Champion Bubba Harris.
Over 35+ consecutive years, the Supercross BMX factory team has included Olympic gold medalists, UCI BMX World Champions, USA BMX Grand National Champions, Pan American Games gold medalists, UCI Pump Track World Champions, X Games gold medalists, and USA BMX Golden Crank award winners. No other factory BMX racing team has maintained this level of sustained commitment to riders at every level — from 8-year-old expert racers to Elite Men competing at the UCI World Cup.
This roster is compiled from Supercross BMX's own historical records, with some years still being filled in as team records are recovered. Some earlier years list only Elite-level riders — full amateur rosters for those periods are being reconstructed. If you rode for Supercross and don't see your name, please contact the team.
AA Pro — Billy Harrison
The first Supercross factory rider. The frame was built for him. The name "Supercross" was his idea — coined at 2am during a late-night phone call from a national race.
A Pro — James Prichard
A Pro — Kevin Gentry
17x — Ray "The Denver Destroyer" Luscombe
17x — Rayner Matthews
16x — Brian Hernandez
15x — Jon Agnew
8x — Cesar Lopez
A Pro — James Prichard
A Pro — Kevin Gentry
17x — Ray Luscombe
16x — Ryan Vanderveen
15x — Jon Agnew
A Pro — Todd Steen
A Pro — Todd Steen
A Pro — John Gonzales
21x — Steve Spencer
AA Pro — Eric Jones
Roster being reconstructed — contact Supercross BMX if you rode this year
AA Pro — Jason Donnell
AA Pro — Zack Roebuck
Vet Pro — Turnell Henry
28x — Eddie Livingston
18x — JP Fellin
16g — Stephanie Anderson
AA Pro — Jason Donnell
Pro Women — Stephanie Anderson
28x — Eddie Livingston
18x — JP Fellin
A Pro — Kevin Gentry
Pro Women — Stephanie Anderson
28x — Eddie Livingston
18x — Ronnie Chalk
Roster being reconstructed — contact Supercross BMX if you rode this year
Roster being reconstructed — Randy Roberts confirmed on team from ~2000 onward
Roster being reconstructed — contact Supercross BMX if you rode this year
Elite Men — Dale Holmes 🇬🇧
Elite Men — Jan Baltzersen 🇩🇰
Elite Men — Tim Kneip
A Pro — Randy Roberts
A Pro — Bryan Otten
19x — Mike McGonigle
16x — Dave Fryzel
Elite Men — Jan Baltzersen 🇩🇰
A Pro — Randy Roberts
A Pro — Tomas Fernandez
A Pro — Bryan Otten
A Pro — Henrik Baltzersen 🇩🇰
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
35x — Bill Madden
28x — Moses Tillmon
16g — Rachel Blackwell
16x — Justin Dodson
15x — Chris Krooswyk
14x — Robbie Valenzuela
14x — Brandon Little
13x — Tomas Richards
12g — Kayland Maxwell
12g — Amanda Little
10x — Aaron Maxwell
Elite Men — Jan Baltzersen 🇩🇰
A Pro — Randy Roberts
A Pro — Tomas Fernandez
A Pro — Henrik Baltzersen 🇩🇰
Vet Pro — Todd Parry
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
46-50c — Ken Pliska
35x — Bill Madden
28x — Moses Tillmon
16g — Rachel Blackwell
16x — Justin Dodson
15x — Chris Krooswyk
14x — Robbie Valenzuela
14x — Brandon Little
13x — Tomas Richards
12g — Kayland Maxwell
12g — Amanda Little
10x — Aaron Maxwell
8x — Justin Meyers
Elite Men — Jarret Kolich
Elite Men — Jimmy Brown
Vet Pro — Todd Parry
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
46-50c — Ken Pliska
46-50c — Deanna Jamieson
28x — Randy Roberts
21x — Moses Tillmon
17x — Bakari Hassan
16g — Rachel Blackwell
16x — Justin Dodson
15x — Chris Krooswyk
15x — Chris Hale
14x — Tomas Richards
14x — Brandon Little
12g — Kayland Maxwell
12g — Amanda Little
10x — Aaron Maxwell
10x — Anthony Martinez
8x — Justin Meyers
Elite Men — Kenth Fallen
Elite Men — Aaron Johnson
Elite Men — Jimmy Brown
Vet Pro — Dave Bittner
A Pro — Adam Treadwell
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
Elite Women — Kaila Sweeney
Elite Women — Krystal Hime
46-50c — Ken Pliska
46-50c — Charlie Williams
46-50c — Deanna Jamieson
28x — Randy Roberts
21x — Moses Tillmon
17x — Bakari Hassan
16x — Brandon Little
15x — Tomas Richards
13g — Amanda Little
13x — Aaron Maxwell
12g — Kayland Maxwell
10x — Anthony Martinez
8x — Justin Meyers
Elite Men — Kenth Fallen
Elite Men — Jimmy Brown
Vet Pro — Turnell Henry
Vet Pro — Dave Bittner
A Pro — Joe Sowers
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
Elite Women — Kaila Sweeney
Elite Women — Krystal Hime
46-50c — Ken Pliska
46-50c — Charlie Williams
46-50c — Deanna Jamieson
28x — Randy Roberts
17x — Bakari Hassan
17g — Megan Sowers
16x — Brandon Little
16x — Tomas Richards
13g — Kayland Maxwell
13g — Amanda Little
13x — Aaron Maxwell
10x — Anthony Martinez
8x — Justin Meyers
Elite Men — Tyler Brown
Elite Men — Jimmy Brown
Vet Pro — Kenth Fallen
Vet Pro — Dave Bittner
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
Elite Women — Kaila Sweeney
Elite Women — Elke Vanhoof 🇧🇪
Youth — Kye Whyte 🇬🇧 (Supercross BMX / Alan's Factory Team)
46-50c — Ken Pliska
46-50c — Deanna Jamieson
28x — Randy Roberts
17x — Bakari Hassan
17x — Tomas Richards
17g — Kyleigh Kalapaca
16x — Kalvin Davis
16x — Brandon Little
15g — Amanda Little
15x — Aaron Maxwell
14g — Alison Sennett
13g — Kayland Maxwell
9x — Chachi Warner
8g — Ashley Shrader
Elite Men — Kris Fox
Elite Men — Jimmy Brown
Elite Men — Aaron Johnson
Elite Men — Logan Collins
Elite Men — Kurt Pickard
Elite Men — Anders Gronsund 🇳🇴
Vet Pro — Kenth Fallen
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
Elite Women — Courtney Tomei
Elite Women — Kaila Sweeney
Elite Women — Amelie Despaux 🇫🇷
Elite Women — Elke Vanhoof 🇧🇪
46-50c — Ken Pliska
36x — Randy Roberts
17x — Bakari Hassan
17x — Kalvin Davis
17x — Brandon Little
17g — Kyleigh Kalapaca
17g — Lauren Padilla
16g — Amanda Little
15x — Nate Padilla
14g — Alison Sennett
9g — Ashley Shrader
Elite Men — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Kris Fox
Elite Men — Jimmy Brown
Elite Men — Aaron Johnson
Elite Men — Logan Collins
Vet Pro — Kenth Fallen
Elite Women — Samantha Cools 🇨🇦
Elite Women — Courtney Tomei
Elite Women — Kaila Sweeney
46-50c — Ken Pliska
36x — Randy Roberts
17x — Jeremy Rommel
17g — Lauren Padilla
16g — Dani George
15x — Nate Padilla
10g — Ashley Shrader
Elite Men — Bubba Harris
Vet Pro — Kenth Fallen
Elite Women — Courtney Tomei
46-50c — Ken Pliska
36x — Randy Roberts
28x — Shannon Troglia
17x — Jeremy Rommel
17g — Dani George
17g — Lauren Padilla
16x — Nate Padilla
12x — Anthony Burcardo
11g — Ashley Shrader
A Pro — Jeremy Rommel
Vet Pro — Kenth Fallen
Junior Women — Dani George
46-50c — Ken Pliska
36x — Shannon Troglia
36x — Randy Roberts
19/27x — Kalvin Davis
17x — Nate Padilla
15x — Zach Tossett
A Pro — Jeremy Rommel
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
Elite Women — Kim Hayashi
Junior Women — Dani George
46-50c — Ken Pliska
36x — Shannon Troglia
36x — Randy Roberts
19/27x — Kalvin Davis
17x — Nate Padilla
16g — Rachel Mydock
14g — Natalie Schmidt
9x — Tristan Mitchell
8x — Katin Mitchell
8x — Kyle Mitchell
Elite Men — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Jeremy Rommel
Elite Men — Jared Garcia
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
Elite Women — Dani George
46-50c — Ken Pliska
36x — Shannon Troglia
36x — Randy Roberts
19/27x — Kalvin Davis
17/27g — Rachel Mydock
16x — Justin Anderson
14g — Natalie Schmidt
10x — Tristan Mitchell
9x — Katin Mitchell
9x — Kyle Mitchell
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Jeremy Rommel
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Rachel Mydock
46-50c — Ken Pliska
36x — Shannon Troglia
36x — Randy Roberts
17/27g — Brandi Milligan
16x — BJ Ensey
15x — Ryan Puckett
14g — Anna Johnson
14g — Natalie Schmidt
13x — Gavin Bowers
11x — Tristan Mitchell
10x — Katin Mitchell
10x — Kyle Mitchell
9g — Annabella Hammonds
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
A Pro — KJ Romero
A Pro — Mike Swearengen (Brabandt)
A Pro — Josh Klatman
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Rachel Mydock
45x — Shawn O'Gorman
45x — George Goodall
36x — Randy Roberts
21x — Corey Salas
17x — Ryan Puckett
16x — Riley House
15x — Gavin Bowers
15/16g — Anna Johnson
14g — Abbie Johnson
14x — Tristan Mitchell
13x — Katin Mitchell
13x — Kyle Mitchell
11x — Justin Seitz
11g — Annabella Hammonds
10x — Brandon Dabbs
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Anthony Dean
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
A Pro — KJ Romero
A Pro — Mike Swearengen (Brabandt)
A Pro — Corey Salas
A Pro — Josh Klatman
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Rachel Mydock
45x — Shawn O'Gorman
45x — George Goodall
36x — Randy Roberts
17x — Riley House
16x — Gavin Bowers
12x — Justin Seitz
12g — Annabella Hammonds
10x — Wyatt Worth
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Anthony Dean
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
A Pro — KJ Romero
A Pro — Mike Swearengen (Brabandt)
A Pro — Josh Klatman
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Rachel Mydock
45x — Shawn O'Gorman
45x — George Goodall
36x — Randy Roberts
28x — Nick Valencia
17x — Riley House
12x — Justin Seitz
12g — Annabella Hammonds
10x — Wyatt Worth
8x — Justin Perkins
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
A Pro — Kamren "Kam" Larsen
A Pro — Makieva "The Hulk" Hopson
A Pro — KJ Romero
A Pro — Mike Swearengen (Brabandt)
A Pro — Josh Klatman
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
Elite Women — Felicia Stancil
45x — Shawn O'Gorman
45x — George Goodall
36x — Randy Roberts
28x — Nick Valencia
17x — Riley House
13g — Annabella Hammonds
12x — Justin Seitz
10x — Wyatt Worth
9x — Justin Perkins
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
A Pro — Kamren "Kam" Larsen
A Pro — Makieva "The Hulk" Hopson
A Pro — KJ Romero
A Pro — Mike Swearengen (Brabandt)
A Pro — Josh Klatman
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
Elite Women — Felicia Stancil
45x — Shawn O'Gorman
45x — George Goodall
36x — Randy Roberts
28x — Nick Valencia
17x — Riley House
13g — Annabella Hammonds
12x — Justin Seitz
10x — Wyatt Worth
9x — Justin Perkins
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Cameron "Cam the Dirtdevil" Moore
A Pro — KJ Romero
A Pro — Mike Swearengen (Brabandt)
A Pro — Josh Klatman
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
45x — Shawn O'Gorman
45x — George Goodall
36x — Randy Roberts
28x — Nick Valencia
17x — Riley House
14x — Gaige Gomolicke
13g — Annabella Hammonds
12x — Justin Seitz
10x — Wyatt Worth
9x — Justin Perkins
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Cameron "Cam the Dirtdevil" Moore
Vet Pro — Tim Dinger
Vet Pro / Coach — Kenth Fallen
A Pro — KJ Romero
A Pro — Mike Swearengen (Brabandt)
A Pro — Josh Klatman
A Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Beth Shriever MBE 🇬🇧
45x — Shawn O'Gorman
45x — George Goodall
36x — Randy Roberts
28x — Nick Valencia
17x — Riley House
13g — Annabella Hammonds
12x — Ti D-S 🇬🇧 (UK — Peckham BMX Club)
12x — Justin Seitz
10x — Wyatt Worth
9x — Justin Perkins
Junior Women (UCI) — Aiko Gommers 🇧🇪 (Belgium — defending UCI Pump Track World Champion, riding SX Vision F1)
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Spencer Cole
Elite Men — Vicente Garcia 🇧🇷
Vet Pro — KJ Romero
Vet Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Beth Shriever MBE 🇬🇧
Elite Women — Vineta Petersone 🇱🇻 (Latvia)
60x — Turnell Henry
55x — George Goodall
55x — Shawn "Swifty" O'Gorman
45x — Kenth Fallen
45x — Randy "The Bulldozer" Roberts
36x — Nick Valencia
17-20w — Annabella Hammonds
16x — Deegan Brown
16g — Hannah Leakey
15x — Josh White
14x — Gaige Gomolicke
13x — Justin Perkins
12x — Kaiden Ireland
11x — Ryder Merki
11x — Ti D-S 🇬🇧 (UK — Peckham BMX Club)
10g — Sequoia "Scoops" Gomolicke
Big Bike / Ride Out Crew — Isaac Irvine · Craig Watson "Craig Lamborghini" · Randy Roberts · Josh Randall "Camel Joe" · David Ramey · JP Fellin
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men / Coach — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Spencer Cole
Elite Men — Vicente Garcia 🇧🇷
Vet Pro — KJ Romero
Vet Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Lexis Colby
Elite Women — Bella Hammonds
Elite Women — Vineta Petersone 🇱🇻 (Latvia)
60x — Turnell Henry
55x — George Goodall
55x — Shawn "Swifty" O'Gorman
45x — Kenth Fallen
45x — Randy "The Bulldozer" Roberts
36x — Nick Valencia
21-25x — Tyler McGuire
17-20x — Deegan Brown
17-20w — Kylie Martin
17-20w — Hannah Leakey
16x — Josh White
15x — Gaige Gomolicke
14x — Justin Perkins
13x — Kaiden Ireland
12x — Ryder Merki
12x — Ti D-S 🇬🇧 (UK — Peckham BMX Club — @ti_bmx_865)
11g — Sequoia "Scoops" Gomolicke
9g — Eden Ireland
Big Bike / Ride Out Crew — Isaac Irvine · Craig Watson "Craig Lamborghini" · Randy Roberts · Josh Randall "Camel Joe" · David Ramey · JP Fellin
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men (Team Captain / Coach) — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Kye Whyte 🇬🇧 (rejoined Jan 16, 2025 — signed through 2028 LA Games)
Elite Men — Oliver Moran 🇦🇺 (joined Feb 25, 2025)
Elite Men — Vicente Garcia 🇧🇷
Vet Pro — KJ Romero
Vet Pro — Kalvin Davis
Elite Women — Lexis Colby
Elite Women — Vineta Petersone 🇱🇻 (Latvia)
60x — Turnell Henry
55x — George Goodall
55x — Shawn "Swifty" O'Gorman
45x — Kenth Fallen
45x — Randy "The Bulldozer" Roberts
36x — Nick Valencia
17-20x — Deegan Brown
17-20w — Hannah Leakey
17-20w — Kylie Martin
16x — Josh White
15x — Gaige Gomolicke
14x — Justin Perkins
13x — Kaiden Ireland
12x — Ryder Merki
12x — Ti D-S 🇬🇧 (UK — Peckham BMX Club — @ti_bmx_865)
11g — Sequoia "Scoops" Gomolicke
UCI European Junior — Kristers Apels 🇱🇻 (Latvia)
9g — Eden Ireland
Canadian Factory Team (Manager) — Ken Cools · Canadian Factory Team — Autumn Zambo (W3 9-Girl)
Big Bike / Ride Out Crew — Isaac Irvine · Craig Watson "Craig Lamborghini" · Randy Roberts · Josh Randall "Camel Joe" · David Ramey · JP Fellin
🏆 Kristers Apels — 2025 UEC BMX European Champion, Men Junior (Valmiera, Latvia)
🏆 Oliver Moran — 2024 Australian Elite National Champion & U23 World Cup Overall
Elite Men (Team Captain) — Maris Strombergs
Elite Men (Team Captain / Coach) — Bubba Harris
Elite Men — Kye Whyte
Elite Men — Oliver Moran
Elite Men — Vicente Garcia 🇧🇷
Freestyle / Park — Marcus Christopher 🇺🇸 (long-term deal — 2024 Paris Olympian · 6x X Games Medalist · X Games Ventura 2024 Gold)
UCI Pump Track — Tommy Zula 🇺🇸 (long-term deal — First-Ever UCI Pump Track World Champion 2019)
Elite Women — Lexis Colby
Elite Women — Vineta Petersone 🇱🇻 (Latvia)
UCI European Junior — Kristers Apels 🇱🇻 (Latvia)
UK — Ti D-S (Peckham BMX Club)
French Partnership — Sarrians BMX Team (full club — 3-year deal announced Jan 22, 2025)
Canadian Factory Team (Manager) — Ken Cools · Canadian Factory Team — Autumn Zambo + full roster TBA
Full amateur + masters roster — supercrossbmx.com/pages/2026-factory-team
The Legends Who Stayed — 10+ Years on the Factory Team
The Supercross BMX factory team has always been a family. And like any family, some people never leave. These riders have been on the Supercross factory program for ten years or more — in some cases, for over a quarter century. They represent the heartbeat of what the team is all about: not just winning, but showing up. Every national. Every year. Every season. No exceptions.
Randy Roberts is the longest-serving active member in the history of the Supercross BMX factory team — by a long shot. A hometown hero from Apple Valley, California, Randy has been on the gate in Supercross colors since approximately the year 2000, making 2026 his 25th or 26th consecutive year on the team. He races the big bike classes, serves as a cornerstone of the Ride Out crew, and has been a constant presence at USA BMX nationals coast to coast for a quarter century. He earned his nickname "The Bulldozer" the same way he's earned everything else — by doing the work, every single time. Randy Roberts is living proof that the Supercross BMX family isn't just a slogan.
The defining figure of the Supercross BMX factory team across multiple decades. Bubba Harris has been on the team as an Elite Men rider, head coach, and team captain continuously since 2010 — but his connection to Supercross runs even deeper. A 3x USA BMX #1 Pro, 5x USA BMX Golden Crank Pro of the Year, UCI World Elite Men's Champion, and USA BMX Hall of Famer, Bubba remains the ultimate example of what Supercross BMX is built on. Still coaching. Still on the gate. Still winning.
Wikipedia →Ken Pliska has been racing Supercross BMX in the 46-50c and masters age classes since approximately 2004 — more than twenty years of faithful factory representation. A true example of what the Supercross family is about: showing up year after year, keeping the fire alive, and proving that BMX never has an age limit.
George Goodall has been a staple of the Supercross BMX factory team in the masters 45x and 55x classes since at least 2006 — nearly two decades of consistent factory-backed racing. A regular presence at nationals across the country, George is one of the unsung backbone riders who keeps the Supercross family strong.
Kenth Fallen began his Supercross career as an Elite Men competitor and transitioned into a Vet Pro / Coach role that he held for over a decade. First appearing as an Elite Men rider in 2006, Kenth has been a key mentor figure on the team — passing knowledge to younger riders while continuing to compete in the masters classes himself.
KJ Romero joined the Supercross factory program in the A Pro class around 2007 and remained a consistent presence for nearly seventeen years, eventually transitioning to Vet Pro. A fixture at USA BMX nationals, KJ represents the kind of loyalty and dedication that defines the Supercross team culture.
Shawn "Swifty" O'Gorman has been racing Supercross colors in the 45x and 55x masters classes since approximately 2007. For seventeen years he has shown up at nationals, carried the Supercross flag in his age class, and embodied the team's belief that BMX is a lifelong pursuit — not just a youth sport.
Kalvin Davis first appeared on the Supercross roster as a 17x rider in 2008 or 2009 and developed through the amateur ranks into a consistent A Pro and Vet Pro competitor. Over fifteen years on the factory team, Davis grew up within the Supercross program — one of the clearest examples of what it looks like to build a BMX career within a single team family.
Ukiah, California. One of the most decorated young amateur racers in USA BMX history — winning the Grand National Quadruple (class and cruiser wins in the same Grand National weekend) in both 2021 and 2023. A Factory Supercross BMX rider from age 8, racing through to 17 Expert. Brother of UCI World #3 plate holder Sequoia Gomolicke.
She came up the same way her brother Gaige did — born and raised in Ukiah, California, racing Supercross BMX since she was a little kid, and turning every gate drop into a statement. In 2025 at the UCI BMX World Championships in Copenhagen, Sequoia "Scoops" Gomolicke stepped onto the world stage and earned a #3 plate in the 13 Girls class — putting the Gomolicke name on the world championship podium for the first time as a female rider. The sister of two-time Grand National Quadruple Champion Gaige Gomolicke, Scoops is one of the most exciting young riders in the Supercross family and I couldn't be more proud of what she's building. The best is absolutely still to come.
Latvian Factory Supercross BMX rider who claimed the Men Junior gold medal at the 2025 UEC BMX European Championships in Valmiera, Latvia — racing in front of his home crowd on a Supercross frame. An emerging star representing the Supercross program at the highest level of European competition, racing alongside Latvian teammate Vineta Petersone.
Elke Vanhoof is one of the most decorated female BMX racers in European history, and I'm proud to say she was part of the Supercross family during her early professional career. A multi-time Belgian National Champion and a soldier in the Belgian Armed Forces, Elke represented Belgium at the 2016 Rio Olympics — finishing 6th in the world — and again at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. She raced for us during a critical stretch of her development and that connection has always been a point of pride for this program. In December 2024, after 25 years of giving everything she had to this sport, Elke announced her retirement. We wish her nothing but the best in what comes next. What a career.
Wikipedia →The most decorated British BMX racer in history rode for Supercross BMX in 2022–2023. Won Olympic Gold at Tokyo 2020, UCI World titles in 2021 and 2023, and the 2022 European Championship — becoming the first BMX rider in history to simultaneously hold Olympic, World, and European titles. Appointed MBE for services to BMX racing.
Wikipedia →One of the great international riders to come through the Supercross program. Sammy Cools rode Elite Women for Supercross from 2003 through 2010, was a Canadian Olympic team member, and is the sister of Ken Cools — the brand's first-ever Canadian factory rider, now heading the 2026 Canadian Factory Team. Supercross and the Cools family go back to the very roots of the program.
The Prince of Peckham. Kye Whyte first rode Supercross BMX in 2008 as a youth rider on the Supercross BMX / Alan's Factory Team, winning British Champion #1 plates in both Class and Cruiser. He went on to win Olympic Silver at Tokyo 2020. Then on January 16, 2025, he officially rejoined the Supercross factory team — signed through the 2028 LA Games. Working with Bill Ryan and Oliver Moran to develop the Vision F1 XXXXL carbon frame for the biggest riders in the sport.
Wikipedia →I'll be honest with you — when we brought Marcus Christopher onto the Supercross BMX family on a long-term deal, it was one of those moments where you feel the program turning a new page. Marcus is from Canton, Ohio, he turned pro at 13 years old, and he has gone on to become one of the most decorated and beloved athletes in all of freestyle BMX. Six X Games medals. Gold at X Games Ventura 2024. A 4th-place finish at the 2024 Paris Olympics — the best result an American man has ever had in Olympic BMX freestyle. And he did it after coming back from a crash in 2023 that required four metal plates and 16 screws to put his face back together. He went back to the same course twelve months later and won. That's the kind of person we want carrying the Supercross name.
Wikipedia →Tommy Zula is the first-ever UCI Pump Track World Champion — he won those inaugural rainbow stripes in Winterberg, Switzerland in 2019 and nobody is ever going to be able to take that from him. Born and raised in Dayton, Ohio, Tommy started on a BMX track at age seven and built a professional career the hard way — racing, grinding, and eventually making the leap to pump track where he became the best in the world. We signed Tommy to a long-term deal because he represents exactly what we've always stood for: real ability, real dedication, and the kind of credibility you cannot manufacture. The Supercross family already has deep roots in the Pump Track world through KJ Romero and Vineta Petersone, who both compete at the UCI Pump Track level on Supercross frames — and adding the first-ever UCI Pump Track World Champion to that group is something we're extremely proud of. We're fired up to have Tommy in the family.
Instagram →Beyond the Track — Supercross BMX Freestyle & MTB Champions
Supercross BMX has always been first and foremost a racing brand — but over the years, some of the most talented athletes in all of BMX have carried the Supercross name into freestyle, pump track, MTB, and collegiate competition. These riders took the brand to places it had never been before.
One of the most decorated freestyle BMX riders in history was an early Supercross BMX freestyle rider, riding alongside Larry Edgar and Aaron Johnson on the Supercross freestyle team around 2011–2013. Kevin Peraza went on to become the only athlete ever to win X Games Gold in BMX Dirt (2016), Park (2017, 2021) and Street (2023) — 11 total X Games medals, 7 gold. He also won Simple Session 2013 and 2016. Featured in the early SX Cinema YouTube videos on a Supercross frame, his career launched from the brand's freestyle program. He now represents Mexico internationally.
Wikipedia →Belgian BMX racer Aiko Gommers made history in 2021 when she won the Red Bull UCI Pump Track World Championship in Lisbon, Portugal — the first major world title of her career, won at just 17 years old, riding a Supercross BMX Vision F1. She also raced the UCI BMX Racing World Cup Junior series on Supercross frames. Supercross BMX honored her title with a limited-edition signature sock. She went on to compete at the 2024 Paris Olympics representing Belgium in BMX racing. Aiko has since moved on to Stay Strong, but she will always be part of the Supercross story — that world title was won on our frames, and we couldn't be more proud of what she achieved.
Wikipedia →Larry Edgar rode for the Supercross BMX freestyle team from approximately 2009 through 2013. His career launched on a Supercross frame, winning the 2009 Gatorade Free Flow Tour BMX Park competition at The Compound in Perris, CA at just 15 years old. He returned to win the 2011 Gatorade Free Flow Tour BMX Dirt competition at the same venue — with his future Supercross teammate Kevin Peraza winning BMX Park at the exact same event, the SX freestyle team placing first in both disciplines on the same day. He later became back-to-back Vans BMX Pro Cup Overall Champion (2017 & 2018), 2017 Simple Session Champion, and 2017 NORA Cup Reader's Choice Rider of the Year.
Instagram →Blake Carney was the head of the Supercross BMX mountain bike team around 2012 — a rare crossover program that showcased the brand's versatility beyond BMX racing. As the Supercross MTB team rider, Carney won the Collegiate National 4X Mountain Bike title, proving that frames built for BMX speed translate across disciplines.
Aaron Johnson is one of the unique riders in Supercross history who competed in both the Elite Men race program (2009–2010 on the factory team) and the Supercross freestyle team (through 2012). A true crossover ambassador for the brand. We miss Sunshine as he passed away during the COVID years, but his speed, his style will never be forgotten and we have photos of him all around the office in memoriam. RIP Aaron.
A Truly Global Family — International Riders & Partnerships
Supercross BMX has never just been an American brand. From the very beginning, Bill Ryan's vision was to get the best riders in the world on the best frames — regardless of what passport they held. The Supercross factory program has fielded riders from the UK, Canada, Latvia, Brazil, France, Australia, Belgium, New Zealand, and beyond. These are just some of the international connections that make the program truly global.
British Caribbean rider born and raised in London. Factory Supercross BMX since 2020. Titles: South Champion 2020 & 2021 · UK National Champion 2022 · competing at UCI European Series and World Championships. Teammate of Kye Whyte and Tre Whyte at Peckham BMX Club — the heart of British BMX. Follow: @ti_bmx_865
Factory Supercross BMX rider competing at UCI World Cup and European level. Won the Men Junior title at the 2025 UEC BMX European Championships in Valmiera, Latvia — racing in front of his home crowd on a Supercross frame. Racing internationally alongside Vineta Petersone representing Latvia on the Supercross Elite Women's program.
Three-year official partnership announced January 22, 2025. Founded in 1991, Sarrians BMX is one of the largest and most successful BMX clubs in Europe and one of the four biggest European clubs alongside Verona (IT), Zolder (BE), and Papendal (NL). All Sarrians Team riders now race on Supercross BMX frames and Speedline Components. The Sarrians track in Provence is also a UCI World Cup venue.
Announced October 7, 2025. Ken Cools — New Zealand Olympic Coach, trainer to Olympians and #1 Pros, and former coach to Bubba Harris during his back-to-back USA BMX Pro Title wins — returns as Supercross BMX's first Canadian Factory Rider and heads the new Canadian Factory Team for 2026. Big brother of three-time USA BMX #1 Pro Woman Sammy Cools. First rider announced: Autumn Zambo (W3 9-Girl). Full roster TBA following USA BMX Canadian Grands.
Long-serving Supercross Elite Men's rider competing at USA BMX nationals and UCI international events. A cornerstone of the Elite Men's program through 2023–2026.
Joined February 25, 2025. 2024 Australian Elite National Champion · 2024 U23 Oceania Champion · 2024 U23 World Cup Overall winner. Co-developing the Vision F1 XXXXL frame with Bill Ryan and Kye Whyte for the biggest riders in the sport. CTD Industries is now the official Supercross BMX and Speedline distributor for the Australian and Pacific market (2026).
Factory Supercross BMX rider 2022–2026. Competing at UCI World Cup and major international events, representing Latvia at the highest level of the sport on Supercross frames.
Multi-time Belgian National Champion. 2016 Rio Olympian (6th place) and 2020 Tokyo Olympian. One of the most decorated female BMX racers in European history. Retired December 2024 after 25 years in the sport.
What Makes This Record Unbreakable
Thirty-seven years without missing a season. No other factory BMX racing team in the world has maintained continuous operation since 1989. Brands that were giants in the 1990s have come and gone. Factory programs that seemed permanent evaporated when corporate backing dried up. Supercross kept going — not because it was the biggest company in the sport, but because the people running it never stopped caring about the sport.
Bill Ryan said it clearly in the team's origin story: "Contrary to popular belief, we don't actually have to have a team. We do it out of passion for the sport and because we want to help BMXers achieve their goals and dreams." That's not marketing language. That is 37 years of gate drops proving it true.
The team that started with one rider — a Pro who never got to race the frame built for him — has grown into a program that has fielded Olympic medalists, UCI World Champions, USA BMX national champions, UCI Pump Track World Champions, X Games Gold Medalists, and hundreds of junior and amateur riders who learned what it means to race with a factory behind them. Every one of them earned their jersey. None of them bought their way onto the team.
"You're either part of the BMX family or you're not."Supercross BMX — Team Philosophy, 1989 to present
The 2026 season is underway. The factory team is active. The frames are faster than anything Supercross has ever built. And somewhere at a USA BMX national right now, a rider in a Supercross jersey is on the gate — carrying forward a tradition that started in a parking lot in Apple Valley, California, thirty-seven years ago.
The longest running factory BMX racing team in the world. Still racing. Still winning.
Frequently Asked Questions — Supercross BMX Factory Team
What is the longest running factory BMX racing team in the world?
How many times has Supercross BMX won the USA BMX Golden Crank Team of the Year?
Which Olympic medalists have ridden for Supercross BMX?
Who founded Supercross BMX and where are they located?
Who has been on the Supercross BMX factory team the longest?
What BMX riders who rode for Supercross went on to become famous?
How many USA BMX Golden Crank Bike of the Year awards has Supercross won?
What is the Supercross BMX Vision F1 frame?
Does Supercross BMX have a buy-in team program?
Where can I buy Supercross BMX frames?
Thank You to Our Co-Sponsors — The Backbone of the Program
For 35+ years, the Supercross BMX factory team has been supported by some of the greatest brands in the sport. These companies believed in what we were building and helped make every national, every world championship, and every podium moment possible. Listed in order of their tenure with the program — longest first:
Fly Racing has been the official gear and helmet sponsor of the Supercross BMX factory team for over fifteen years — and there is no co-sponsor we are more proud of than this one. Every rider who has pulled on a Supercross jersey has had Fly Racing protecting them from head to toe, from the youngest 9-year-old grom to Olympic Silver medalists. Fly Racing and Supercross go together like peanut butter and jelly. They have been an absolutely critical part of this program and we are proud of every single year of this partnership.
Speedline BMX Components have been on Supercross factory bikes since the very beginning of the program — stems, cranks, brakes, rims, hubs, pedals. Speedline is essentially the parts arm of the Supercross family and is carried right here at SupercrossBMX.com. Every world champion, every Olympian, and every Grand National winner on this team has trusted Speedline. There is no more important co-sponsor in the history of this program.
ODI has been on Supercross factory bikes since 1989 — the AG-2, the Vans grip, the Elite Pro, the CF grip — generation after generation of factory riders have had ODI in their hands. They are the world leader in grip technology for a reason and we are proud to carry them at SupercrossBMX.com.
Vans has been with us since 1989 and the relationship has only grown over the decades. I was wearing a custom pair of Vans on the start gate the night the idea for the first Supercross frame was born. When Steve Van Doren called us and said we should do something together for our 35-year anniversary, I was honored. The Vans × Supercross BMX 35-Year Anniversary collection — a limited-edition Old Skool silhouette — is one of the things we're most proud of. Available at SupercrossBMX.com.
Before there was Supercross BMX, there was Tech BMX Products — my racing pants and number plate company. The Tech factory team (Glen Pavlosky, Brian Lopes, Kiyomi Waller, Billy Harrison) was the direct predecessor to the Supercross factory team. Tech Pants were on every Supercross factory rider from day one in 1989 through the early 1990s. Still available today at SupercrossBMX.com. If you know, you know.
PowerBar was one of the first non-endemic brands to back us — right out of the gate in 1989. At a time when most BMX teams were scraping by, having a mainstream sports nutrition company behind the Supercross factory team was a big deal. They believed in what we were building early, and we have never forgotten that.
Odyssey came on board with us in 1989 as one of our earliest component co-sponsors. Their commitment to precision racing parts matched what we were trying to do with the Supercross frame, and their components equipped some of the fastest riders in the country during the early years of the program.
Mac # Plates has been putting the Supercross brand front and center on the gate — literally on every factory rider's front number plate. A BMX-specific company that has supported the program through countless national events across the country.
Oakley has protected the eyes of Supercross factory riders through some of the most intense racing moments in BMX history — from USA BMX nationals to UCI World Cup events and Olympic competition.
HT pedals have been under Supercross factory riders for years, providing the platform and power transfer that elite BMX racing demands at every gate drop.
Tioga was a co-sponsor of the Supercross BMX factory team for a period of time, with their tires appearing on factory builds during their partnership with the program.
Maxxis was a co-sponsor of the Supercross BMX factory team for a period of time during the program's history, with their tires appearing on factory builds during their partnership.
Race the Frame the Team Trusts
The same frames ridden by Olympic medalists and Golden Crank winners — available to every rider, at every level. Built in Apple Valley, California.
SHOP THE SUPERCROSS STORE NOW TO RIDE WHAT THE TEAM RIDES