It’s amazing how F1 races from the 1950s are on TH-cam in 4k, but Supercrosses from the early 2000s look like they were filmed on the first Nokia camera phones.
It is also amazing that our cell phone conversations are usually as bad as the 1969 moon landing transmissions, with more dropped calls,-------------and we don't care at all.
I am sure you agree, that what James Sr. offered was some good advise during that emotional RC moment. I saw a real friendship there. It was cool to see, I agree.
RC had his crashes in the first year or 2 in 125 and 250 SX. Then he got it under control for SX. For MX, he never lost a championship that he entered. 1 moto away from 3 perfect 250 seasons even. Retired with both SX and MX, with over a 83% "win average". James never stopped crashing.
We today, confuse a whip with a scrub. Nobody ever scrubbed down more height over a jump, than James did on the 125. The lighter bike made it easier to do. RC had a fantastic "whip" but even he admitted that he could not learn to scrub as James did.
Your "opinion" is not just your opinion. It is fact in reality. The SX tracks for the last couple decades, ever since the FIM took over our racing in the USA, are designed to keep everybody the same speed as much as possible. With this, we can see how forced "equality" hinders individual greatness.
How grand is the intellect of man, when the smallest of things are their topic of choice? Is there something smaller to think about? The rest of the world, (the big things that make us small?), is yours to discover. And in doing so, we leave "small" to the smallest of things. Nothing is more liberating from the "small" than the exercise of our minds of potential greatness.
It’s amazing how F1 races from the 1950s are on TH-cam in 4k, but Supercrosses from the early 2000s look like they were filmed on the first Nokia camera phones.
It is also amazing that our cell phone conversations are usually as bad as the 1969 moon landing transmissions, with more dropped calls,-------------and we don't care at all.
Thanks for uploading this!
1:20:56 so cool seeing James Stewart Sr. talking with RC, that guy just loves this sport, and knows what it takes to make a champion
I am sure you agree, that what James Sr. offered was some good advise during that emotional RC moment. I saw a real friendship there. It was cool to see, I agree.
At o9:00 Tortelli seems to have done a whip with the rear end and collided his bike into Chad in mid-air.
And people complained bubba crashed a lot 😮
RC had his crashes in the first year or 2 in 125 and 250 SX. Then he got it under control for SX. For MX, he never lost a championship that he entered. 1 moto away from 3 perfect 250 seasons even. Retired with both SX and MX, with over a 83% "win average". James never stopped crashing.
DVD.
2 Discs.
If james stewart started the bubba scrub then why was RC doing the scrub on the honda before james stewart?
We today, confuse a whip with a scrub. Nobody ever scrubbed down more height over a jump, than James did on the 125. The lighter bike made it easier to do. RC had a fantastic "whip" but even he admitted that he could not learn to scrub as James did.
Back when the track used to be cool and interesting now their no pass tracks in my opinion.
Your "opinion" is not just your opinion. It is fact in reality. The SX tracks for the last couple decades, ever since the FIM took over our racing in the USA, are designed to keep everybody the same speed as much as possible. With this, we can see how forced "equality" hinders individual greatness.
Its amazing Ricky was able to win all those championships with that crap coming from his wife! Way to not support your man No wonder he divorced her.
What happened? I saw RC remarried, but it seemed pretty quiet.
at least he didn't have his ears stuck up in his cap
How grand is the intellect of man, when the smallest of things are their topic of choice? Is there something smaller to think about? The rest of the world, (the big things that make us small?), is yours to discover. And in doing so, we leave "small" to the smallest of things. Nothing is more liberating from the "small" than the exercise of our minds of potential greatness.
@@EarthSurferUSA i would be willing to bet that you are one of those gay 4 strokers, go smoke some more weed.