Josh Hill & Josh Hansen Raw SX Practice Video

Last week at the Suzuki SX test track near Corona, Twitch This Films caught up with Josh Hill & DBK rider Josh Hansen while they did some motos on the Supercross track. No music, just bikes & both Josh’s tearing up the track..Enjoy!

Filmed & Edited by J.Sanders

For more free content check out Twitch’s Free app on iTunes & Android called TwitchThis (Search- Jeremy Stenberg)

Ricky Carmichael Joining Forces with Carey Hart

On Saturday morning at Monster Energy Cup, RCH Racing announced the joining forces of Carey Hart’s Dodge/Sycuan Casino Racing team with Ricky Carmichael and factory support from Suzuki and Yoshimura research and development, as well as the signing of Broc Tickle to ride the 2013 RM-Z450.

Team Owner, Carey Hart, knows the partnership with Ricky Carmichael and Suzuki was the next step in growing his race program that started out as an idea on a napkin in 2007. “This is a really exciting time to be teaming up with Ricky. His resume speaks volumes and his ability to work with riders and build champions is priceless. Ricky was the pivotal piece to bringing Suzuki to our team and now that we have a long term relationship with them on a factory level I feel that we have all of the pieces to go out and win a championship. I think with Ricky working close with Broc during pre-season and throughout the course of the season will help boost Broc’s confidence and bring him up to the next level. Broc already has a ton of talent and he knows how to win championships. We are ready to be on the podium and winning races.”

Ricky, who will be leading the team’s rider development and motorcycle testing, research, and development, is looking forward to sharing lessons learned in his professional career now with RCH Racing. “I’m really excited about this partnership. Carey being successful as an athlete and as a business person has built a great foundation here in the sport and with myself being able to bring the Suzuki program over to the team really solidifies the deal and makes the team complete. We are looking forward to many good years. 2013 will be a building year and in 2014 I think we will be in contention for wins and a championship. Broc finished on the podium several times at the end of this past season and is a former Lites Champion so he knows what it takes to win races and championships. I think he is a diamond in the rough and with a little bit of guidance from myself and support from Suzuki I think we will be able to run top 5 each weekend and score some podium finishes.”

For Broc Tickle, the switch to RCH Racing was a great move for him. “Having Ricky part of the program and his knowledge from being the champion he is and his history with Suzuki made making the switch an easy decision for me. The factory support from Suzuki and Ricky knowing all there is to know about the bike and working with him at the track and in training makes this a step in the right direction for me. I’m looking forward to being part of RCH Racing and helping the team grow.”

“The sponsors of RCH Racing who have continued their support for the coming year and years to come are the key to continuing to help make this team grow and develop into a championship winning team. The people involved from Carey and Kenny to the mechanics and the behind the scenes crew really make this team what it is and a great team to ride for.”

The support from Yoshimura and Suzuki brings RCH Racing to a new level of competition and gives them the tools they need to build a championship contending team. Don Sakakura, President of Yoshimura Racing, LLC states, “Yoshimura is very excited to be involved as a sponsor of the RCH program. The rich history of industry Icons; Ricky Carmichael and Carey Hart are legendary; Yoshimura is thrilled with this opportunity! We look forward to great success this coming racing season!”

Larry Vandiver from American’ Suzuki Motor Corporation couldn’t be happier on the announcement of the partnership. “We are pleased to partner our champion approved RM-Z motorcycles with RCH Racing. We look forward to a long partnership that will raise the bar on racing and bring new fans to the sport.”

Look for the Dodge/Sycuan Casino/Suzuki RCH Racing team to make the debut at Round 1 of Monster Energy Supercross in Anaheim, CA on January 5, 2013.

H&H Go All in for Supercross Finals in Vegas; IRM Ep. #4

Carey Hart brings us behind the scenes of Hart and Huntington’s blowout Supercross finals weekend in Vegas. From autograph signings to freestyle demos to a down and dirty punk rock show featuring legendary T.S.O.L., and finally wrapping it all up at the Monster Energy Supercross awards where HandH is presented the Innovation Award for the 2012 season. Sin CIty is the birth place of Hart and Huntington and they always end it with a bang in their home town! Everyone’s here to celebrate: Carey, the whole HandH team, Travis Pastrana, and P!nk.

Supercross Team Autograph Signings this weekend in Las Vegas

Dodge/Sycuan Casino/Hart and Huntington/Bel-Ray Racing Supercross Team Autograph Signings this weekend in Las Vegas

Chapman Dodge – Thursday, May 3rd feat. Carey Hart, Travis Pastrana, TJ Lavin, and Miss Supercross
Hart and Huntington Tattoo Shop – Friday, May 4th at Hart and Huntington Tattoo Shop

Carlsbad, CA (May 1, 2011) – Join us for two (2) nights of fun and excitement to kick off the Monster Energy Supercross Finale weekend in Las Vegas!!

Come meet the Dodge/Sycuan Casino/Hart and Huntington/Bel-Ray Racing Supercross team this Thursday, May 3rd from 6pm-9pm at Chapman Dodge in Las Vegas. Special guests include Carey Hart, Travis Pastrana, TJ Lavin, and Miss Supercross Dianna Dahlgren; live music by Cash’d Out, a Johnny Cash cover band, and a LivFast freestyle motocross demo on site!

When: Thursday, May 3rd 6pm-9pm
Autograph signing 7:30pm-9pm

Where: Chapman Dodge
3715 East Sahara Avenue
Las Vegas, Nevada 89104
(702) 457-1061

Who: Carey Hart, Ivan Tedesco, Josh Hill, Kyle Partridge, Josh Hansen, Travis Pastrana,
TJ Lavin, Dianna Dahlgren, Cash’d Out, and LivFast

Giveaways: Chapman Dodge is giving away a KLX 110 along with free Hart and Huntington
giveaways, free samples of Monster Energy, and Forgiven, the 1st alcohol metabolizer.

Two nights of free fun to start your weekend off right!!

When: Friday May 4th 7:30pm-8:30pm

Where: Hart and Huntington Tattoo Shop (inside the Hard Rock)

Who: Carey Hart and the Dodge/Sycuan Casino/Hart and Huntington/Bel-Ray racing team

5 minutes with Josh Hill by Racer X

Time changes a lot of things. Just a few years ago Josh Hill was under the factory Yamaha tent (which is now defunct) grabbing his first career SX win. By 2010, he was challenging Ryan Dungey and Ryan Villopoto for the SX Championship. But a gruesome crash while contesting a back-flip for X Games Speed and Style would cost Hill his 2011 season. After spending countless hours in rehabilitation and surgery, the always upbeat Hill was left searching for answers. Would he be able to ride again? Would he ever return to form?

A year later Hill was back on the gate at Anaheim 1 looking to prove he still had what it took to be grouped alongside the likes of Villopoto, Dungey, Reed, Stewart and Canard. But tragedy struck Hill once again. A first turn crash at the opening round (in his first heat race) left Hill sidelined with a broken tibia and heel. After missing the first twelve rounds of the series Hill was set to return in Houston but suffered yet another setback just days before.

Racer X: You were all set to return at Houston, but suffered an arm injury just days before. Take us through what happened.
Josh Hill: Well, it was actually a weird deal. I had just got done doing some motos and was pulling off the track and took my hand off the bar, kind of relaxing my hand, and something got caught on my throttle. I don’t know if it was my glove or my jersey but it just twisted the throttle back and I ended up jumping a jump, with no hands. I ended up crashing with my hand stuck out. At first we thought I just hyperextend my elbow, so I got an X-ray that night and they didn’t see anything wrong. I waited about two weeks to ride again and rode about 20 laps at Milestone to see if I could get through the pain. It wasn’t getting better so I went the doctor and we found out it was broken. I actually broke the radial head in my elbow. I actually just found that out two days ago, so just trying to figure out how long it’s going to be before I can come back.

What was going through your mind after yet another setback?
I have made a lot progress. The way I was riding the day I crashed I was really confident going into Houston. I was going to practice one more day and practice a couple more starts just to make sure I was feeling right. It’s a bummer that I got setback, but it hasn’t got me down or over racing yet.

You were also coming back from a broken tibia, how is that injury coming along?
It’s going good. My foot is doing good. I really wasn’t having any issues with that when I was riding – I was feeling really solid. This little crash I had was really awkward. I was going really slow and the throttle hooked on something and threw me off the bike. I didn’t hurt my leg at all, it was just the way I landed and the way I stuck my hand out, it just messed up my arm. It’s just such a weird deal.

You’ve been through a lot the past few years, but always seem to have an upbeat attitude while going through your toughest times. What gives you the will to keep striving to race and get back to 100 percent?
I just want to race man. All I’ve ever done since I was five was race dirt bikes. I don’t really accept what’s going on. I don’t really think that it’s any indication on how my progress has been getting back on the bike. I just keep having these little setbacks that have cost me time. That’s the way I look at it, and if I keep working hard it will come back.

I’m guessing you’re looking forward to 2013 for a return?
Yeah, pretty much. I’m going to try and see how I’m doing. The break in my arm really isn’t bad at all; it was a real clean fracture. I’m going to get a few more tests to see what’s going on with it, to make sure nothing else is going on with it. The doctors are saying that it shouldn’t be that long of an injury. I’m going to get re-evaluated in two weeks to see where we are at and if it’s healed that will give me a few weeks to get ready and maybe come back for Las Vegas. I definitely feel like I have something to prove, to show that I can still ride a dirt bike. It’s been so long that I’ve actually been in a race; people are starting to forget that.

You’ve had a real supportive team behind you with Hart and Huntington. What has that meant to you having those guys standing behind you after all you’ve been through?
It’s killer. You pretty much just explained it. Those guys have stuck behind me through thick and thin – through this whole deal. I can’t thank them enough. It’s really uplifting to know that someone has the faith in you that you have in yourself. It’s definitely great to have those guys. It gives me motivation to keep trying to comeback for those guys, and for myself. It’s just starting to set in that I might not race again, professionally, until 2013. It’s bumming me out, but it’s one of those things where I just have to get over it. I’m going to try and come back for Las Vegas if everything works out perfect. This summer I think I’m going to go back up to Oregon to start training with my dad again and do everything I can to be fit and ready again for next year.

Have you been in any talks with the team for 2013 yet?
No, not really. My contract is up in 2012 and I feel like we’ll cross that bridge when we get there. Those guys have supported me so much and I just want to keep doing my job that I’m doing for them now.

Looking forward to 2013, do you expect to be 100 percent — including all your previous injuries?
Everyday it makes progress. I’m getting to the point now where my leg doesn’t bog me down nearly as much when I get on the bike. I have feeling in those parts of my foot again. I can feel when the foot is out on my peg and grab my shifts comfortably. It’s coming around and I’m getting stronger. At this point I think a few more months of really hard training and getting some time on the bike over the summer will put me back on track for next year. It’s a bummer to say, because it’s so far to look ahead. I want to be back on the bike and show what I have in me but it just hasn’t been in the cards.

I want to back track to A1. You had done so much to get back to racing and then in the first turn you got hurt again. What was going through your mind at that point?
It’s funny man. I think I wanted to come back so bad that I put the pain out of my mind. I mean, I have broken three bones since January. I ended up breaking my heel in that crash as well as my tibia, we found that out later. I think I want to race so bad that I block out the pain so that I don’t think this stuff is broken when it happens. I just think “Oh, yeah, it just bumps and bruises and I’ll be alright in a couple of weeks.” This last injury I went out and rode with a broken arm because I didn’t think anything was wrong because nothing showed up on the X-rays. Then I went to our team doctor, Dr. G, and it just looked bruised and beat-up. I thought it was just a little sprain in my elbow, so I continued to train like I was getting ready to go race. Then I went riding and it kept hurting and that’s when we found out it was broken.

You’ve been through a lot these past few seasons, but obviously still have a deep passion for racing. With that being said, did the word retirement ever enter your mind?
Yeah, I definitely thought about quitting. But the thing about it is I think I would beat myself up for a while if I didn’t give 100 percent of my effort without coming back and trying. I couldn’t give up now and be satisfied with what’s happened. I feel like I had a lot more to show this year than with what happened. All these things that have happened have been such minor setbacks. It’s not like they have really hurt my physically, it’s just hurt me enough that I can’t get back on my bike and perform like I need to. It literally feels like charlie horses compared to what I’ve been through in the past. I can’t let it get to me and I got to keep looking forward.

So it’s more mental rather than psychical?
Well it’s a little of both. It’s physical because of what I can do on the bike, but it’s mental because of all this time I’ve had to sit on the couch and watch these guys race. But I have to continue to stay positive and keep my eye on the prize.

I think everyone is looking forward to a healthy Josh Hill in 2013.
Yeah in a perfect world I would like to come back and race Vegas and show what I’ve got in me. I know it won’t show a whole lot, but just that I can do it. Then maybe go race Mammoth possibly and then maybe, I’ve I’m feeling really strong, race Washougal if everything works out perfect. I’m just going to keep my nose to the grindstone and just keep working like the season is just around the corner.

Changing gears a bit. Your brother, Justin, is steadily climbing the ranks himself. What has it been like watching him achieve some of the same success you have?
Man, I’m so proud of my little brother. He’s working his butt off. He’s got a really good program going. I think having my dad go through everything with me, getting a taste of what it’s like in the pros, he has a better program than me. He’s probably one of the hardest working kids I’ve seen. He’s dealing with a knee injury right now. Actually, he had surgery today. But I’m really proud of him and I know he will bounce back from this.

You have had a lot of people behind you the past few years. Who you would like to thank?
Yeah, I really got to give it up to the team –Dodge/Hart and Huntington/Sycuan – they have stuck behind me from day one. Also, DC Shoes. They have been behind me this whole time and are a really great sponsor. I also want to thank my family, who has helped me stay strong through all of this. Also my girlfriend, she has been with my everyday and stayed by my side this whole time. I really can’t thank everyone enough.

H&H launches INK ROCK MOTO on Network A

Hart and Huntington is much more than a brand, it’s a LIFESTYLE defined by three words: Ink, Rock, Moto.

For the first time ever, viewers will be taken on a behind the scenes ride into this lifestyle with Hart and Huntington’s new Network A series, appropriately titled, INK ROCK MOTO.  Carey Hart and the rest of the Hart and Huntington crew showcase it all – from Supercross races to tattoo sessions to photo shoots to late night concerts – it’s all in here!

In this episode, Hart and Huntington team owner, Carey Hart, talks about the roots of the team and gets us up to speed on the 2012 Monster Energy Supercross season from injuries to Josh Hill and Ivan Tedesco to Josh Hansen’s early season victories.

Make sure check out Network A every two weeks for new videos about the madness and fun that is INK ROCK MOTO!

Welcome Derek Costella to the H&H Family


You’ve seen him mash on mini’s, race Supercross and back flip a big wheel on Fuel TV’s Thrillbillies, now your gana see him in Hart and Huntington Clothing!

Photo Gallery from St. Louis