November 22, 2024
BMX rider and X Games medalist Pat Casey was killed in a motorcycle stunt at a private track in Ramona, California, on Tuesday. The 29-year-old was trying a jump around 2:30 p.m. at Slayground Motocross Park, which is owned by motorcross star Axell Hodges, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported. Casey missed...

BMX rider and X Games medalist Pat Casey was killed in a motorcycle stunt at a private track in Ramona, California, on Tuesday.

The 29-year-old was trying a jump around 2:30 p.m. at Slayground Motocross Park, which is owned by motorcross star Axell Hodges, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.

Casey missed the landing and lost control of his bike.

He did not have a pulse when paramedics arrived, and they were unable to resuscitate him.

Friends and sponsors of Casey took to social media to mourn the young champion’s death.

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“We are deeply saddened by Pat Casey’s passing and our thoughts and prayers go out to his wife, children, parents and siblings,” X Games said on Instagram. “A true legend in the action sports community, Pat will always be a member of the X Games family and an inspiration to everyone’s life he touched.”

T.J. Lavin, a fellow BMX rider and the host of MTV’s competition series “The Challenge,” also made a statement on Instagram.

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“The world lost one of the baddest to ever do it. I’m so sorry for his wife and kids. @patcaseybmx will forever be remembered for the down to earth sweetheart of a guy that he was,” Lavin wrote.

Others posted tribute videos of the rider on social media.

According to Vans, a sponsor for Casey, he went pro when he was just 16 years old.

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He bought his first house at 18, where he built the “Dreamyard,” a famous BMX training ground.

Casey was a medalist at the 2012 and 2013 X Games and won his first gold medal in 2021, according to the Union-Tribune.

His premature death left behind his wife, Chase, and two children.

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“I’d like the world to know that he was a man of God, that he loved his family, that he spoke his mind, that he was just everything that embodies — ‘Mr. Perfect’ is what I called him,” Chase Casey told KTLA.