After possibly the longest season in UK comp history and several postponements leading to the Spank Ind. Dirt Wars final eventually being moved indoors to Motion Ramp Park in Bristol, the last points scoring round of the season was upon us.
Quoting one of the riders from Sunday; ‘Motion is the kind of skatepark that rewards you if you get it right but takes away all your speed & momentum if you get it wrong.’ This was evident straight away, those riders comfortable with parks, pumping wooden transitions & sending it large made it look easy. There were a number of the regular competitors present along with loads of new faces making the trip to this more unusual skatepark comp.
Practice kicked off and everyone started to pull their lines together, getting used to the park whilst sussing out what the competition was capable of. In open category the new faces were definitely going to give the regular podium place riders a run for their money (or prizes in this case) and Diamondback/Terminal 1’s Rob Welch was schooling a number of Pros right from the start. After an hour of practice it was time to kick off the proceedings.
With 12 riders in Open being reduced down to 6 for the final everyone had to be on top of their game not to be knocked out. A number of riders including Dan Wren, Greg Parry, Wig + Sam Lewington-Booth & Freddy Pulman were showing their skills with nice 360s over the spine as well as sweet airs out of the quarterpipes. But it seemed that the judges needed to see not only big smooth riding round the whole park but you needed to have at least one power move to make it through to the final. It was also evident that holding it together for the whole 60 seconds of each run was proving a challenge to some and even if a run had contained some super slick riding, pulling out early due to loosing pump, an error or just tiredness was not looked upon favourably. In the end it was moves like Greg Parry’s 540 to fakie over the spine, Ben Nolan’s signature no handed shoebox, Danny Stewart’s massive sub box Abubaca and James Jones’ flairs, effortless barspins & footjam whiplashes that took them into the final. Alongside them the top two riders on the series leaderboard, Freddy & Wig, made the final with the wooden surroundings not effecting their trick bags; even barspin airs and tyre taps on the huge sub box were thrown into the mix.
Moving into the Pro Qualifiers it was again clear to see who were the Skatepark (as well as Dirt) shredders. Some riders just looked a little uncomfortable when it came to sending shapes over the jumpbox, often due to the fact that you needed to boost a fair bit of air out of the quarter before it to get enough speed. Notable riding in the qualifiers came from Adam Williams with the smoothest of spine backflips, Rob Newman’s signature crankflip to manual to barspin as well as big tailwhips from both Alfie Stephens & Jack Gear. But they didn’t quite have the amplitude and speed of the other riders to impress the judges enough to move forward into the finals. Marcel Hunt scraped through beating Adam Williams by just one point whilst Danny Pace, Clinton Johns & Daryl Brown showed that they had built on the skatepark skills that they had shown at last years Motion round. Finishing off the qualifying pro riders was newcomer Rob Welch, famed for going huge at skateparks round the North of England he managed to do the same in this compact South-West ramp park.