Back in 2001, the
Red Bull Rampage
concept was conceived to serve one of the fringes of the blossoming
mountain-bike movement. There were riders -- courageous, driven and a
little crazy -- who were at once exploring new terrain, testing their
own limitations and defining a new genre of the sport, and their riding
style was not represented at all in competition. Freeride mountain
biking was rapidly evolving with every insane drop and first descent,
and Red Bull Rampage was on board to help push it even harder.
The inaugural event was a landmark in the sport's history and was
followed by three more through 2004. If you won Red Bull Rampage -- or
even survived the weekend with all your bones intact -- your reputation
as a bad ass on two wheels was unassailable. Unlike events with a
defined course and familiar obstacles, Red Bull Rampage let the riders
determine their own route down treacherous cliffs; the more creative and
risky the line, the better the score.
After 2004, the event went on hiatus, but the memories -- and the
reputation -- grew in scale. The mountain-bike contest scene did evolve
to address the changes in the sport, but in general it still lagged
behind what the most progressive riders were capable of. As contest
riders began to get pigeonholed into separate disciplines -- downhill,
slopestyle, dirt jumping -- it was the freeride ethos that leveled the
playing field. You needed skills in every aspect to survive a true
freeride run, and the time came once again to prove who had the balls to
get it done.
Red Bull Rampage made its return in 2008 with yet another epic
gathering of the best mountain bike riders in the world. Anyone who
believed the sport couldn’t progress further would have eaten their
words on that dusty ridge near Virgin, Utah. Man-made “enhancements”
graced the venue for the first time, but the main objective remained:
find the most challenging lines down the mountain and ride them with
style. Regardless of their background, the riders were all equal at the
top of the mountain; equal in the challenge they faced to get to the
bottom of it.
The next event was held in 2010, punctuated by
Cameron Zink’s jaw-dropping 360 off a 40-foot drop.
Every time Red Bull Rampage takes place, individuals push themselves
like never before, collectively progressing the sport to a new level.
The time has come again: On October 5-7, 2012, mountain biking’s best
will return to southern Utah to climb the next -- or the next few --
rungs of the ladder.
Athlete selection criteria has been announced, and the aim has been
to collect the best of the best, the top riders in many disciplines who
own the skills to survive in the desert.
Zink and Brandon Semenuk, the 2010 and 2008 champions, will automatically be placed into the October 7 final. The
top 12 finalists from 2010
are pre-qualified, excused from competing in the October 5th qualifying
battle. Invites to the qualifier will go out to the top 12 ranked
riders from the
FMB World Tour,
as well as the top two finishers at the Chatel Mountain Style in
France in July. Red Bull Rampage serves as the final stop on the 2012
FMB World Tour.
More details will be available soon; outside of the actual event
dates, clear some space on your calendar on Saturday, December 8 from
2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET to watch all of the best action from Red Bull
Rampage on NBC as part of the Red Bull Signature Series.
2012 Red Bull Rampage Coming Soon