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XGames drops Best Trick Moto and Snowmobile

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http://msn.foxsports.com/other/story/x-games-eliminates-snowmobile-moto-x-best-trick-events-031213

DENVER (AP)
The X Games will no longer feature snowmobile or Moto X best trick competitions.


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ESPN, which sanctions and televises the X Games, announced the cancellations on Tuesday. The X Games still plans to hold other snowmobile events at Winter X, along with motorcycle competitions at Summer X.

In a statement, ESPN said it will focus on sports disciplines that feature ''athletes who also compete in multiple, world-class competitions.''

The decision comes after two horrific snowmobiling incidents last January in Aspen, Colo., including the death of Caleb Moore from injuries he sustained when his 450-pound sled rolled over him after a backflip gone wrong during a freestyle competition.

Later in best trick, a snowmobiling newcomer fell off his machine and the throttle stuck, sending it veering into the crowd.
 
<header class="article-header">X Games Best Trick competitions canceled

By Colin Bane
Published <time>Tuesday March 12, 2013</time>

http://xgames.espn.go.com/article/9...inues-moto-x-best-trick-snowmobile-best-trick


</header><figure class="video">
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<figcaption>Kyle Loza performs a trick during X Games Los Angeles in 2009. The Moto X Best Trick and Snowmobile Best Trick competitions have been removed from future X Games.
<cite>Tatiana Zic/ESPN Images</cite></figcaption></figure>
The Moto X Best Trick and Snowmobile Best Trick events at X Games are being discontinued, ESPN announced Tuesday.

The decision to discontinue the Best Trick events follows, but is not directly tied to, an investigation into the death of Snowmobile Best Trick competitor Caleb Moore in January, according to an ESPN spokesman.
Moore died of head and heart injuries sustained during the Snowmobile Freestyle competition at X Games Aspen 2013, where he under-rotated a backflip attempt and crumpled under the weight of his tumbling snowmobile. A Freestyle Snowmobile demonstration previously scheduled for next week at X Games Tignes in France had previously been canceled a month before Tuesday's announcement.

"Moto X Best Trick and Snowmobile Best Trick were not dropped in response to what happened in Aspen," an ESPN spokesman said. "This decision was under consideration before Aspen, and, in fact, our review of Snowmobile Freestyle continues."

ESPN released a statement saying, "This change reflects our decision to focus on motor sports disciplines which feature athletes who also compete in multiple, world-class competitions [e.g., professional events and tours] reflecting the highest degree of athlete participation, competitive development and the global nature of our X Games franchise. Over the past 18 years we have made more than 60 changes to our competition lineups at X Games events to capture the evolution of the sport and these continue that growth."

The Moto X Best Trick competition at X Games has driven progression in action sports since 2001, when Mike Jones became the first to land a trick on snow where the rider gets inverted, kicking his feet high in the air while hanging on to his handlebars (known to competitors as the "Kiss of Death") at Winter X Games in Mount Snow, Vt. Travis Pastrana electrified the audience inside the Staples Center in Los Angeles in 2006 with the first-ever double backflip, Kyle Loza won gold in 2009 with his "Electric Doom" body varial, and Australian rider Jackson "Jacko" Strong brought the first front flip in 2011.

Yet it's also been one of the most dangerous events from the beginning. Carey Hart crashed a backflip attempt during the event at X Games 7 in Philadelphia, also in 2001, breaking several bones.

X Games will continue to host freestyle motorsports competition, ESPN said.

"Progression in these sports obviously comes with more risk," the network said. "Nobody can eliminate risk in its entirety, but what we can do is focus on providing world-class events that are as safe and organized as possible."
 
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