Motomag was born from Carl Lein's love of the sport and determination to see an all race magazine. Country: USA Jack McDaniel: I met Carl a few years ago when he had the dream of turning what was at that time a "zine" into a full blown mag. Motomag was born from Carl's love of the sport and determination to see an all race magazine. He saw a few of my photos and asked if I could help out. Now Carl didn't have much money to pay but what was lacking in payment was made up in friendship. I found Carl to be a genuinely great person with more passion for BMX than I've ever seen. He truly got chills from watching riders from groms to AA's. While solely laying out the magazine himself he found time, some how, to help a group of riders out with the BKS (Big Knobby Squad) MotoMag team. Well, the magazine never quite took off. People loved it but unfortunately underestimated the need for support by the BMX public. It seems allot of people don't understand it takes money to do any type of media. | |
issue 1 - july august 2002 Jarrett Kolich on the cover. Races: ABA Midwest, ABA Buckeye, NBL Southpark. Interview: Jason Richardson. | |
issue 2 - september october 2002 Cover: Kyle Bennett. Races: ABA Lone Star, ABA Worlds, NBL Great Lakes, ABA Land O' Lake. Interview: Kyle Bennett Where to Race: Washington State. Test: Redline Proline 24". |
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issue 3 - november december 2002 Cover: Maxx Rackey Races: NBL Grands, ABA Falls, ABA Gators, ABA Reno, ABA Redline Cups. Test: Supercross UL Pro XL. Interbike Coverage. |
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issue 4 - january february 2003 Cover: Brandon Nichols Races: ABA Grands, NBL Sunshine, NBL Christmas Classic, Romero's 4 Man Challenge. Test: Specialized S-Works. Test: Dingo Pro Chromoly. Giant team interview. |
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issue 5 - march april 2003 Cover: David Herman. Races: NBL Twin Indy, ABA Silver Dollar, ABA Mid-America, ABA Volunteer, ABA Sooner. Test: Crupi, HH Racing, One Pro Cruisers. Ultimate Pro Standings. |
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issue 6 - may june 2003 Cover: Randy Stumpfhauser and Nate Berkheimer Races: NBL Easter/Orlando, ABA Winters/Phoenix, NBL Silver State/Vegas, ABA Supers/Desoto, NBL Gators/Tampa, ABA Gators/Oldsmar, NBL Springs/Morristown, ABA Great Northwest/Pasco Test: Staats Pro XXL, Alliant Xpress Mini Warwick Stevenson Interview. |
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issue 7 - july august 2003 Kim Hayashi on the cover. |
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issue 8 - september october 2003 Paul Lange on the cover. |
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issue 9 - november december 2003 David Wray on the cover. |
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issue 10 - january february 2004 Jeff Pease on the cover. |
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Cash Matthews, www.vintagebmx.com, february 2004: We are still mostly black and white, but have added high gloss paper, and more color is next. Thanks for the support of MotoMag, and before I throw my two cents in, I think it is important to understand my position with Moto Mag. I do not, nor have I ever owned Moto Mag, nor do I have any financial interest in the company. I am, however, totally dedicated to seeing it flourish and grow as our sport continues to grow. I believe Moto Mag is the best BMX magazine, and in fact, I believe it to be the ONLY BMX Magazine. The ABA and NBL magazines are both "Association Magazines", and are therefore used to service their members. Thus, I do not compare them. The other magazines are what I call "20 inch lifestyle" magazines, and deal rarely with the true BMX world. Moto Mag is dedicated to BMX racing. Our objective is to grow the sport and to document the sport. We have accomplished much in our first year, and I am so proud of Carl Lein in all that he has done. Consider our first year: 1. We created the Hess Cup, named after the founder of Mongoose. This award brings ABA,NBL, UCI, and The X Games into one arena and awards the top overall rider in the system. No one else has ever had a program like this. 2. We created the doughnut shootout. What other magazine would dare take on the doughnut industry? 3. We have the greatest photographer in the world. Jack McDaniel is the greatest. 4. We put a female on the cover! Kim Hayashi had one of the best covers ever, and in fact, Redline used it as one of the "Ten best Redline covers ever" in their new catalog. And we didn't put Kim on the cover to be "PC". We did it because she is an absolute warrior, and deserves this type of recognition. 5. We support Vintage BMX. I run a paid monthly ad supporting Vintagebmx.com. Bill and Hal have also been mentioned in the masthead. 6. For the first year, we have given away thousands of magazines. At 15 different nationals last year, Carl and I gave away Moto Mag for free. 7. We have taken meager reveunes to support a factory team. Carl Lein is a giver, and his riders love and support him! There is much more, but I will stop here. This site has been instrumental in the growth and acceptance of Moto Mag BMX Racing Magazine, and I am thankful for our alliance with Bill, Hal, and the members of this site. We all want the same thing from the sport, and I know somewhere down the road we will have it. |
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issue 11 - march april 2004 Randy Stumpfhauser on the cover. |
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issue 12 - may june 2004 Jeff Upshaw on the cover. |
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Bicycle Retailer and Industry News, august 2004: Carl Lein started Moto Mag BMX two years ago with $1,500 he had planned to spend on new wheels for his car. The magazine was devoted to BMX racing, a niche Lein thought he had all to himself. When Transworld changed the name and focus of its racing title Snap to a more general-interest BMX magazine called Transworld BMX several years ago, the market was left with out a dedicated racing magazine. "The only reason I started the magazine was so that someone would cover BMX racing," Lein said. "There has been a little more coverage lately, and maybe that is because of my magazine, but when I started, the coverage was slim to none." Moto Mag BMX, which turned out its twelfth issue, appeared set lot success. |