Mike Miranda (BMX rider)

Last updated

Mike Miranda
Personal information
Full nameFredrick Michael Felty
Nickname"Hollywood"
Born (1963-11-15) November 15, 1963 (age 61)
Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Team information
Current teamRetired
DisciplineBicycle Motocross (BMX)
RoleRacer
Rider typeOff Road
Amateur teams
1978Steady Pedaler Bike Shop
1978-1980RRS
1981-1982CW Racing
Professional teams
1982-1983CW Racing
1984Torker BMX
1984-1986Hutch Hi-Performance BMX
1987Jamis Cycles
1987CW Racing
1987-1988CW/Revcore/Shadow
1988-1989Free Agent/Vision Street Wear
Major wins
1984 20" Murray World Cup III Champion

Michael Felty [1] formerly Miguel Juan Miranda [2] (born November 15, 1963) is a former American "Old School" professional Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer whose prime competitive years were from 1981 to 1986. His previous surname which he is still widely and most familiarly known by, "Miranda", was his stepfather's name. [1] There seem to be two stories on how he got his nickname "Hollywood". It was either coined by Bicycle Motocross Action (BMXA) editor Steve Giberson because he liked to "show off"; [1] or he had pretty much gave himself the moniker by having a name sticker under the visor of his helmet reading "My name is Hollywood", which was noticed at the 1981 NBA Roncho Nationals. [3] Here is how he tells it in this 1982 quote:

Contents

"This guy I know that races motorcycles in Southern California is a real jerk. Every time you did something stupid, we would call you by his last name. 'You're such a Smith.' And at the Super Bowl of Motocross three years ago (in 1979), he raced and had "Hollywood" on the back of his jersey. From then on, whenever you did something stupid, we would say: 'You're such a Hollywood'. It was meant as a putdown but now I guess it's compliment. I just tell people that they call me that because I like to show off. Steve Giberson started it." [4]
-----Mike Miranda Super BMX April 1983.

Much like fellow pro racers Eric Rupe and Shawn Texas, he was a born again Christian who credited much of his success to God. [5]

Mike Hollywood Miranda now runs the new updated CW Racing https://web.archive.org/web/20110130223520/http://www.cw-racing.com/ He is using the old school retro style 4130 cromo frame and fork. CW has been widely popular by demand of the classic style of BMX.

Mike Miranda had "Miranda Mountain" named after him at the Corona-Norco YMCA BMX track. It was a 180 degree table-top jump/turn. The young guys loved to see him show off on Miranda Mountain.

Racing career milestones

Note: Professional first are on the national level unless otherwise indicated.

Started Racing: September or October 1977 at 13 years old in "Six Grade Class". His first race was at a district school race that was scheduled to meet once a month on a Saturday at Corona Raceway in Corona, California. Every school in his district including his Junior High School in Riverside, California, would participate. [6] The racers raced in their actual grade level and not in a BMX age class. There were no proficiency classes like "Novice" and "Expert". [7] For this reason and that his parents did not want him to get a motorcycle is the reason Mike Miranda started in BMX. [1]

Sanctioning Body: Riverside School District.

First race result: Unknown. "I won a lot". [6] However, this statement is contradicted by a factoid in the BMX Plus! 1988 Calendar. According it Mike Miranda didn't win his first trophy, let alone win, until February 7, 1978, four months after he started racing.

First win (local): See above, unknown.

First sponsor: Steady Pedaler Bike Shop.

First national win: Never won an expert class division while an amateur [8]

Turned Professional: February 15, 1982, at age 18 the day after the American Bicycle Association (ABA)'s Winter Nationals in Chandler, Arizona. [8]

First Professional race result: Fifth place in "A" pro on February 15, 1982, the day after the ABA Winter Nationals at the post race.". [6]

First Professional win: In "B" Pro at the National Bicycle League (NBL) national in Bakersfield, California, on May 30, 1982. [9]

First Junior Pro* race result: See above.

First Junior Pro** win: See above.

First Senior Pro race result: First place in "A" Pro at the National Bicycle League (NBL)/International BMX Federation (IBMXF) Magic Mountain Grand Prix of the United States on October 31, 1982, in Valencia, California. He won US$2,000. [10] the equivalent to US$4,263.21 in 2007 (Cost of Living Calculator). He moved himself up from "B" pro to "A" Level he could have won nine more "B" division races before NBL rule required him to graduate to "A" division. The NBL management went along with his decision since he was doing very well in the "B" pro class at the time it seemed unfair to the other "B" level competitors. [11] Miranda had 11 "B" pro wins with the NBL at the time in addition to a further four junior "A" pro wins with the ABA. [8]

First Senior Pro win: See above.

Retired: Effectively April 3, 1989, in Orlando, Florida, due to a severe back injury. It was a career ender.

Height & weight at height of his career ():

*In the NBL "B" Pro/Super Class/"A" pro depending on the era; in the ABA "A" pro.
**In the NBL "A" Pro/"Elite Men"; in the ABA "AA" pro.

Career factory and major bike shop sponsors

Note: This listing only denotes the racer's primary sponsors. At any given time a racer could have numerous ever changing co-sponsors. Primary sponsorships can be verified by BMX press coverage and sponsor's advertisements at the time in question. When possible exact dates are given.

Amateur

  • Steady Pedaler Bike Shop: 1978
  • RRS (Riverside Redlands Schwinn): 1978-December 1980
  • CW (Custom Works) Racing: January 1981-December 1983. Mike Miranda will turn pro with this sponsor.

Professional

  • CW Racing: January 1981-December 1983. "CW" stood for "Coast Wheels" and later became Custom Works. [12] This is in contrast with JMC (Jim Melton Cyclery) which did start out as a bicycle shop and then began manufacturing its own BMX components including entire bicycles. He left CW because he was essentially tired with being with the same sponsor since almost the beginning of his racing career. Also his friendship with the owner Roger Worsham became more distant and the growth of the company gave it a less than an intimate feel. He cited these reasons for his loss of motivation. [13] Pro Pete Loncarevich replaced him. [14]
  • Torker BMX: January 1984–September 14, 1984. [15] He joined Torker to be a teammate with his best friend and fellow pro racer Tommy Brackens who joined Torker a couple of months before. [14] He became roommates with Brackens in January 1984 sharing a two bedroom apartment in Fullerton, California, [5] right above the apartment Torker Team Manager Mike McLaughlin and Max rider representative "Magoo" McGruther lived in. Miranda and Brackens also set up a membership in a health spa to train together. [16] He left Torker because he had alleged irreconcilable difference with then Torker team manager Steve Johnson. [17] As it turned out, Torker would go bankrupt and let its entire team effort go two months after Miranda's departure.
  • Hutch Hi-Performance BMX: September 15, 1984 – early November 1986. Left Hutch due to its inability to pay his salary because of the company's financial difficulties. [1] including Hutch filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy [18] This was a major disappointment to Mr. Miranda and false promises allegedly made by the management of Hutch caused him enough disillusionment with the BMX industry to take a two-year hiatus from racing. [19] Apparently one of those false promises was the company's alleged failure to pay Miranda's salary and contingencies despite the hard work Miranda put into racing but also ancillary things to promote the company:

    "I went to a whole lot of races. I did good that year - in '86. I won NORA Cup - which is by far the biggest thing that's ever happened to me in BMX. I went on tour-drove every mile in the motor home. Watched the kids. Did the clinics. Bent over backwards for Hutch in every way I could. All I did was eat, breathe, and live Hutch BMX. And he kept telling me, 'The check's in the mail. Check's in the mail.' And by the time it rolled around, it was four months behind, and that's when he let me know there wasn't going to be any check. No contingencies. No nothing. He just said 'Sorry.' I understand - that's business, and it's my fault not watching out for myself. Maybe putting too much trust in my friends. It happened and that was it. I didn't want to do it anymore. I didn't want to get burned again." [19] ---Mike Miranda BMX Action June 1986

  • Jamis Cycles: January 1987-March 1987. In a bike test for Super BMX & Freestyle Mike Miranda was product testing a Jamis bicycle (which was published in the January 1987 issue). He liked the bicycle so much he initiated talks with Jamis for sponsorship [20] after his sponsorship with Hutch Hi-Performance ended. Despite this however, he apparently wasn't happy due to the after effects of his sponsorship with Hutch BMX.

    "I got an offer from Jamis.....but I just didn't want to ride anymore. I didn't have whatever it takes to say yes and do it again, I couldn't get up in the morning and train. So I got a job. Started working, took up golf - put a bunch of different things in my life that would take up the space that BMX had filled" [19] ----BMX Action June 1989

  • CW Racing: Early April 1987-December 1987. Mike Miranda announced what was effectively his semi-retirement from competitive racing to take the position of the CW freestyle team manager. He raced occasionally in the pro class basically for fun. [21]
  • CW/Revcore/Shadow: December 1987-September 1988. Revcore/Shadow was owned by the same man who started and own its elder sister company CW Racing: Roger Worsham. Later Shadow was dissolved and the Company was left with only the CW and Revcore divisions.
  • Free Agent/Vision Street Wear: September 1988 – June 1990. Vision Street Wear and Free Agent joined the trend of two or more companies sponsoring the same race team to spread the financial burden. Mike Miranda left Vision Street Wear to head GT (Gary Turner) Bicycles's Juvenile Promotions Program. [22]

Career bicycle motocross titles

Note: Listed are District, State/Provincial/Department, Regional, National, and International titles in italics. "Defunct" refers to the fact of that sanctioning body in question no longer existing at the start of the racer's career or at that stage of his/her career. Depending on point totals of individual racers, winners of Grand Nationals do not necessarily win National titles. Series and one off Championships are also listed in block.

Amateur

National Bicycle Association (NBA)

National Bicycle League (NBL)

  • None

American Bicycle Association (ABA)

  • None

International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)

  • None

Professional

National Bicycle Association (NBA)

  • None

National Bicycle League (NBL)

  • 1982 "B" Pro Grandnational Champion

American Bicycle Association (ABA)

  • 1984 Arizona State Pro Champion

United States Bicycle Motocross Association (USBA)

  • None

International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)

  • 1984 20" Class Pro Murray World Cup III Champion

Special races, Invitationals and Pro Series Championships

BMX Product lines

Product Evaluations:
BMX Action April 1985 Vol.10 No.4 pg.38 BMX Action test and evaluation.

Notable accolades

What makes Miranda's victory such a stand out is that Miranda did not win a major race event up to that point in 1985 when the voting took place.

Significant injuries

An unknown accident almost completely severed his left ear off, but with medical attention it was reattached and remains permanently deformed.

Racing habits and traits

Post BMX career

BMX magazine covers

Bicycle Motocross News:

Minicycle/BMX Action & Super BMX:

Bicycle Motocross Action & Go:

BMX Plus!:

*Due to a change of ownership, BMX Plus! did not publish a May issue in 1983.

BiCross Magazine (French Publication):

Total BMX

Movies (RAD)

Bicycles and Dirt (ABA Publication):

NBA World & NBmxA World (The official NBA/NBmxA membership publication):

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):

BMX press magazine interviews and articles

*Due to a change of ownership, BMX Plus! did not publish a May issue in 1983.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Old School Hutch web page May 23, 2005 interview. Archived May 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  2. BMX Action 1984 Calendar answer to trivia question in blank date box top row in the month of June.
  3. Bicycle Motocross Action November 1981 Vol.6 No.11 pg.41
  4. Super BMX April 1983 Vol.10 No.4 pg.16
  5. 1 2 BMX Plus! October 1984 Vol.7 No.10 pg.45
  6. 1 2 3 Super BMX April 1983 Vol.10 No.4 pg.11
  7. American BMXer October 1984 Vol.7 No.9 pg.23
  8. 1 2 3 4 BMX Plus! January 1983 Vol.6 No.1 pg.47
  9. Super BMX October 1982 Vol.9 No.10 pg.68 (race results).
  10. BMX Plus! January 1983 Vol.6 No.1 pg.49
  11. BMX Plus! January 1983 Vol.6 No.1 pg.43
  12. History of CW page Archived 2006-05-22 at the Wayback Machine
  13. Super BMX November 1984 Vol.11 No.11 pg.22
  14. 1 2 BMX Plus! March 1984 Vol.7 No.3 pg.9
  15. Super BMX & Freestyle January 1985 Vol. 12 No.1 pg. 60 (photo caption)
  16. BMX Action April 1984 Vol. 9 No.4 pg. 13
  17. BMX Action April 1985 Vol. 10 No.4 pg.
  18. BMX Plus! January 1997 Vol.10 No.1 pg.8
  19. 1 2 3 BMX Action June 1989 Vol.14 No.6 pg.70
  20. Super BMX/Freestyle April 1987 Vol.14 No.4 pg. 5&45 (photo caption)
  21. BMX Plus! July 1987 Vol.10 No.7 pg.12
  22. BMX Plus! September 1990 Vol. 13 No.9 pg. 11
  23. BMX Action March 1986 Vol.11 No.3 pg.46-48
  24. BMX Action May 1986 Vol.11 No.5 pg.90 (second column)
  25. BMX Action January 1986 Vol.11 No.1 pg.64 (sequence photos & photo caption)
  26. ABA BMX Hall of Fame entry page. Archived 2005-02-10 at archive.today
  27. Super BMX November 1983 Vol.10 No.11 pg.5
  28. BMX Action December 1985 Vol.10 No.12 pg.77
  29. BMX Action January 1986 Vol.11 No.1 pg.72
  30. BMX Plus! July 1989 Vol.12 No.7 pg.8
  31. Old School Hutch web page May 23, 2005 interview. However, he got the year wrong and it was in 1989 and not in 1987 as he stated. Archived May 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  32. American BMXer May 1989 Vol.11 No.4 pg.4
  33. BMX Plus! January 1989 Vo.12 No.1 p.7 NBL 1989 schedule.
  34. BMX Plus! February 1989 Vo.12 No.2 p.7 ABA 1989 schedule.
  35. BMX Plus! February 1985 Vol.9 No.2 pg.48
  36. BMX Plus! December 1984 Vol.7 No.12 pg.16 "World's Messiest Room?" with picture.

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