It’s always a good day when Giannis Caternellis drops a new edit and this is the best one I have seen out of Giannis in a while. Look out for the interesting darkside concepts in this one, 0:10 & 5:54, as well as plenty of other moves from Giannis’ trickionary!
Yearly Archives: 2019
Umikaze jam clips FT Kio Hayakawa
YouTube glitch seems to be sorted today, phew! Back to regular updates here on Flatmattersonline and so much going right now it is tough to keep up. Japan as always is popping with content, a couple of nice clips here from Umikaze Jam and Kio Hayakawa’s amazing new backyard line once again plus the first riders line which I cannot rider ID.
Chimara A-Side 2nd Kobe
CHIMARA A-SIDE 2nd KOBE Flatland BMX from LiLt on Vimeo.
Snappy edit from the recent Chimara A Side contest in Kobe, Japan, and by the look of it, what a great event for all levels. If anyone has the battles from this event, get in touch…
Umikaze JAM 2019 Open & Expert Class
Great edit from a windy Umikaze Jam featuring the Open and Expert Class Top3. Look out for a wild teakettle ride out at 1:57 that I have never seen before, and Kio Hayakawa’s backyard turbine jump out to pedals at 3:03!
Masashi Itani – Meriken Park
After trouble all day with YouTube, hoping I had ecome up with a way to load YT videos, excuse the sizing as I work out what the hell is going on with YT…
After a 9 hour day of filming some of the best Japanese flatland BMX riders, both old and current generations, at Chimera A-Side Round 2 in Kobe, Japan, Sunny Singh headed to the legendary spot at Meriken Park with Masashi Itani. This is a spot nearly every flatland rider has seen in a video. It’s a holy site where, for over 20 years, Japanese riders have gathered regularly to ride and feed off each other. Getting to visit it at sunset was a lifelong dream fulfilled. Borrowing Masashi’s bike to do a trick was another. Filming this short segment with him, an actual pro-rider, was a full-circle moment.
Tsutomu Kitayama wins Chimera A Side
Congratulations to Tsutomu Kitayma taking the win this past weekend at the Chimera A side contest in Japan followed on the podium by Moto Sasaki and young back wheel wizard Kio Hayakawa.
White Burke
WHITE BURKE from emer bmx on Vimeo.
Quick little edit of Amos Burke and man of the moment, James White riding LVR abroad their new BSD AVLXs, with a little Prevail skatepark footage and Hastings clip in the mix too.
* Have trouble uploading any YouTube videos right now, unable to use the embed option currently.
Start Combat Round 1, Limu Peru
William Perez sent through this edit from Round 1 of the South American Circuit “Start Combat 2019”. The first round took place in Lima, Peru. Congratulations to Balu who took the win, peep the edit/result below.
1. Sergio Ricardo Balu (Brasil)
2. Max Aburto (Chile)
3. Arturo Garay (Paraguay)
4. Williams Perez (Peru)
5. Jonathan Camargo (Colombia)
The next circuit date is in Colombia Bambuco Jam 12 October, Brazil 01 November and finish in Córdoba, Argentina on 07 December.
Must Watch – James White / Eye of the Tiger
Friday 13th September 2019 shall go down as a memorable day, today I woke up with anticipation for James White’s new edit “Eye of the Tiger”. After the Rocky hype videos all week, I was thinking yesterday, this is a dangerous game he’s playing here, then I thought stop it Effraim. This is James’, this has to be amazing it’s Whitey and he wouldn’t hype like this otherwise.
7am comes around and I didn’t have to wait long, James has already posted, and boy does this not disappoint.
Time and time again I say this, but James does really have that Midas touch and this edit feels once again like I am watching a Dorkin’ part for the first time.
There’s a lot to take in, during this 4 minute plus part, but a couple of things stood out to me right away. Number one, and most importantly it’s evident and refreshing to see James is having fun, cliche as it is to say. That is what it’s all about and love the way James reinvents himself every year, secondly the camera work. I am not sure what he has going on, but a moving camera whilst it appears it’s only James at the spot. I want to know more!
Thirdly, and the crucial ingredient, the riding. There are a couple of lines here that are game changers. James gets widely copied over the years, and I am pretty much you will see it once again after this edit gets widely shared across social media.
00:21: Flip, tyre grab ice cream, bike flip out (that flip out is tasty!) and what I love here is James shows a variety of concepts around that idea again at 1:07 with a half lash in and gerator body varial out and at 1:32 to James’ smith decade variation out!
2:13: Without a doubt my favourite line of the edit, here he takes an existing Whiteski line and makes it new with the concept of holding the head tube only and the execution gets no better.
At 2:57, there’s a similar idea but switches to opposite ice cream and pivot backwards switch foot dump out. There’s way more we can highlight, let the comments roll as I am sure they will.
Absolutely amazing, like a fine wine. James just gets better and better, need some motivation? This is it right here, a banging Must Watch, top marks Whiteski!
James McGraw & His Custom New Ride
Intro/Interview: Effraim.
Photos: James McGraw.
I’m good friends with James McGraw, and even I was surprised that number one he left London Bikes, and number 2 that he managed to keep this custom ride build quiet off social media until it was done. After a quick chat with James, I was pretty curious about all the details of his new ride and figured you at home might be as well.
Like everyone else on social media I saw your new bike post. No more London bikes and a custom bike build, what’s the story?
I feel very blessed that for the past 30 years I have not really had to pay for a bike. I have had a lot of sponsors over the years and London Bikes has been one of the best. For me the change is not any kind of bad blood or issues its simply time I do something 100% my way. With a sponsor you get some input but ultimately there are trademarks of a brand that you deal with. Ultimately I just no longer am willing to compromise my riding just to get a free frame. My new bike is built around how I ride and the style of tricks I want to do. My next birthday will my 50th and with age come ailments that hinder my riding. For years I was a front wheel prominent rider, however I developed really bad back issues due to the leaning and body position of front wheel tricks. At one point I considered quitting do the the constant pain. Instead I found back wheel to be therapeutic in the sense that I ride in a more vertical position which relived the pain I developed from leaning over on front wheel. With that said Will from London has made a very good bike that he designed for what fits his riding, for me it is way to short and I feel limited to back wheel. I took a look at all the bikes I have rode over the years and really thought about what geometry worked best for front wheel and back wheel. I realized the last time I rode front wheel I was riding a longer frame which in theory allowed me to stand more upright during the tricks. I also looked at seat post angle which directly affects the position of your seat location. With the old seats you could move your seat forward or backwards on the seat rails to compensate position but the new seats you can only change the angle of the seat. So seat post angle is a very critical point of reference depending on your height and the style of tricks you wish to do. Also we made sure to build the bike around the forks I ride to insure that the rolling head tube angle is exactly as I desired. Different forks can manipulate the rolling head tube angle of the bike depending on the length of the forks. Bottom line is after months of really thinking about these factors I realized that I could build a bike based on my body size and ailments that would allow me to ride both wheels again. Simply put at my age I don’t know how long I will be able to keep riding at this level, so I built this new frame in a effort maximize my potential as a rider and remove any limits I may have due to a production frame that has a more generalized geometry as opposed to a very rider specific frame.