Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Randy Stumpfhauser

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Nickname
  
"Stumpdog", "Stumpy"

1991-1993
  
Action Racing

Weight
  
77 kg

1990
  
Hi-Tech Racing

Height
  
1.70 m


Rider type
  
Off Road

Role
  
Bicycler

Current team
  
GHP

Name
  
Randy Stumpfhauser

Disciplines
  
BMX racing

Randy Stumpfhauser Randy Stumpfhauser StumpDawgg Twitter

Full name
  
Randall Richard Stumpfhauser

Born
  
January 27, 1977 (age 47) Fresno, California, United States (
1977-01-27
)

Randy stumpfhauser bio


Randall Richard Stumpfhauser (born January 27, 1977 in Fresno, California U.S.) is an American professional "Mid School" Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer whose prime competitive years are from 1998 to the present. He is sometimes called "Stumpdog" or "Stumpy", all are plays on his last name.

Contents

Randy Stumpfhauser httpsiytimgcomviivBm3sJv8qghqdefaultjpg

Randy stumpfhauser training for olympics


Amateur

  • Hi Tech Racing: 1990
  • Action Racing: 1991-1993
  • Powerlite Industries: 1993-February 1996 Stumpfhauser turned pro with this sponsor
  • Professional

  • Powerlite Industries: 1993-February 1996
  • ELF (Extra Light Frames): February 1996-Late December 1996. Stumpfhauser's last race for ELF was the 1996 NBL Christmas Classice in December 1996.
  • Huffy Bicycles: January 1997-December 2003. Huffy decided to drop its entire BMX team and pull out of its BMX effort after the 2003 season.
  • GT (Gary Turner) Bicycles/Hyundai: January 7, 2004-October 2008
  • GHP (Greg Hill Products): October 29, 2008–Present.
  • Amateur/Junior Men/Super X

    National Bicycle League (NBL)

  • 1991 14 Cruiser Grandnational Champion
  • 1991 14 Cruiser National No.1
  • 1993 16 Expert and 16 Cruiser National No.1
  • 1994 17 Expert Grandnational Champion
  • 1994 17 Expert and 17 Cruiser National No.1
  • American Bicycle Association (ABA)

  • 1994 17 Expert Grandnational Champion
  • 1995 World Cup 17-20 Cruiser Champion.
  • 1995 18 Expert and 17-20 Cruiser Grandnational Champion
  • 1995 18 Cruiser National No.1.
  • United States Bicycle Motocross Association (USBA)

  • None
  • Fédération Internationale Amateur de Cyclisme (FIAC)*

  • None
  • International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)*

  • 1994 16-17 Cruiser Bronze Medal World Champion.
  • Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)*

  • 1995 Junior Men Silver Medal World Cup Champion
  • Notable accolades

  • Randy Stumpfhauser has been very prolific in terms of winning the cruiser class of various sanctioning bodies. As of November 2006 he has 15 National and World Championships, 14 of them as a professional; he has won the ABA Pro Cruiser title five consecutive times between 2001 and 2005. He has won the NBL Pro Cruiser division six times, five of them consecutively between 2001 and 2005. He has won the UCI Elite Men Cruiser World Championship four consecutive times between 2002 and 2005. Isolating one block of time he was the Cruiser champion in three different sanctioning bodies-ABA, NBL, UCI-simultaneously for three consecutive years: 2002, 2003, and 2004. In the midst of this accomplishment he won the NBL "AA" National No.1 Pro for the 20" division in 2003. Not to be forgotten are his amateur NBL National age group cruiser titles; his 1995 ABA Amateur National Cruiser No.1 and 1995 ABA World Cup Cruiser championship titles and his 1998 NBL Pro Cruiser National No.1.
  • He was called one of the top amateurs in the country by BMX Plus! in 1995 along with Greg Romero, Andy Contes, Kevin Royal and George Andrews.
  • He is a 1996 ABA BMXer magazine Golden Crank "Rookie of the Year" winner.
  • He is a 2006 ABA "AA" pro PRO Holeshot Award winner.
  • He is the winner of the 2009 Golden Crank Award Pro of the Year.
  • BMX product lines

  • 1999 Huffy Supercharger Randy Stumpfhauser Signature Series
  • Product Evaluations: Snap BMX Magazine December 2000 Vol.7 Iss.12 No.50 pg.112 (2001 model year)

    Significant injuries

  • Tore two ligaments in his right knee at the NBL Sea Otter Classic in Monterey, California on March 23, 1997. He underwent reconstructive surgery. He was laid up for nine months total including time to recover from the surgery. His first race back was the NBL Christmas Classic in Columbus, Ohio on December 28, 1997.
  • Tore ligament in his left knee in 1998
  • He suffered a broken collarbone, scapula and a rib in a crash at the UCI SX race in Fréjus, France in October 2007. He came unclipped from one of his pedals in the first straight in his third moto and hit a roller jump, lost control and flipped over the handlebars. He slammed against a following jump going into the first turn. He missed the 2007 ABA Grandnationals and was hoping to race the 2007 NBL Christmas Classic.
  • Miscellaneous

  • Stumpfhauser holds a B.S. in Engineering
  • 2008 Summer Olympics

    The dream of Stumpfhauser to participate at the 2008 Summer Olympics not realized because of the 5th place in the trials.

    BMX interviews and articles

  • "The Top Amateurs In the Country" BMX Plus! February 1995 Vol.18 No.2 pg.67
  • "The Wheels of Change: Randy Stumpfhauser" Snap BMX Magazine May/June 1997 Vol.4 No.3 Iss.16 pg.46 One of four separate interviews with pros with recent sponsorship changes including Scott Yoquelet, Bogi Givens, & Lawan Cunningham.
  • "Q&A: If you could race one race over again, which would it be?" Snap BMX Magazine December 1999 Vol.6 Iss.10 No.38 pg.42 Single question interview asked of Stumpfhauser and four other profession racers including Christophe Lévêque, Michelle Cairns, Neal Wood, and Jamie Lilly.
  • "From One Track to Another" Transworld BMX May 2003 Vol.10 Iss.5 No.79 pg.32 An article written by pro BMX racer Jason Richardson the described the tryouts on a Velodrome track at USA Cycling's United States Olympic Training Center (USOTC) from January 8 to 14 2003 with Steven Alfred (track racer), Jason Carnes, Kenneth Fallen, Rob Lindstrom (track racer), Darrin Mitchell, John Purse, Craig Reynolds, Richardson himself, Greg Romero, Randy Stumpfhauser and Terry Tenette. Following the lead of Jamie Staff making the British Track Cycling team some of his fellow BMX racers explored the possibility of trying out the track racing discipline with the idea of going to the Olympics. This was done six months before the announcement on June 29, 2003 by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) of their making BMX Racing an Olympic sport beginning in 2008.
  • "Life in the Fast Lane: Warwick interviews Randy" Transworld BMX April 2004 Vol.11 Iss.4 No.90 pg.36 article featuring both Stumpfhauser and Warwick Stevenson with side bar interviews of them interviewing each other.
  • "Stumpy" Moto Mag March/April 2004 Vol.3 No.2 pg.33
  • BMX magazine covers

    Minicycle/BMX Action & Super BMX:

  • None
  • Bicycle Motocross Action & Go:

  • None
  • BMX Plus!:

  • February 1997 Vol.20 No.2 (200) in middle insert leading; Brian Foster (3) in second; Charles Townsend (10) in fourth; unidentified (16) in third. In top right insert dirt jumper Matt Beringer. In bottom right insert Kiyomi Waller (403). In bottom left insert various helmets.
  • Snap BMX Magazine & Transworld BMX:

    Twenty BMX:

    Moto Mag:

  • May/June 2003 Vol.2 No.3 (2) ahead of Christian Becerine (4) and Nate Berkheimer (8) and several other unidentified racers.
  • March/April 2004 Vol.3 No.2
  • BMX World:

    Bicycles Today & BMX Today (The official NBL membership publication under two names):

    ABA Action, American BMXer, BMXer (The official ABA membership publication under three names):

    USBA Racer (The official USBA membership publication):

    References

    Randy Stumpfhauser Wikipedia