Alabama
RideBHM Brings Downhill Bike Park Riding to Alabama
Alabama could be recognized for lots of issues: blue skies, the civil rights motion, and sure, even a Silver Lever IMBA Experience Heart, however the the Yellowhammer state just isn’t but recognized for its downhill bike parks. Hobie King and Emile Hughes are hoping to vary that with a newly opened downhill park, Experience BHM, positioned simply ten miles outdoors of downtown Birmingham.
“We form of reached what we felt like was a plateau,” stated Hughes of using in Alabama. Although there are mountain bike-optimized path networks like Coldwater Mountain in Anniston, and a smattering of path networks in Huntsville, Hughes and King felt just like the state lacked correct gravity using, particularly after touring to different parks within the Southeast, like Experience Kanuga and Windrock.
In 2020 proper earlier than the pandemic, Hughes discovered himself able to get his arms soiled and increase the using alternatives for Alabama mountain bikers. He was the COO for a medical startup and bought his mission, releasing up time and assets. First, he needed to get his black belt in jiu jitsu, however with gyms closed due to Covid, he honed in on one other mission: bringing a downhill bike park to Birmingham.
With out the cash to purchase a significant chunk of land, they knew they’d have to search out someplace particular to put in the park. King and Hughes approached Purple Mountain Park, a former iron-mined mountain that has been reclaimed as a leisure space on the outskirts of Birmingham, with mountaineering trails, a 6-acre off-leash canine park, and now a 200-acre bike park. Hughes stated RideBHM was an ideal match and addition to Purple Mountain since locals have been in search of extra mountain bike trails.
“This was form of a solution for them,” stated Hughes.
Digging in
Although RideBHM secured a strong hunk of land to construct a mountain bike park in, the event was removed from straightforward. Purple Mountain, with its wealthy crimson dust from its iron ore layers had been mined extensively and the land had been tossed and turned.
“So we come into the piece of property and we mainly have a giant rectangle, form of ridgeline southern dealing with with a piece carved out of it for chert mining after which the highest of the ridge is simply scored from the place they sampled for iron ore.”
Hughes says the soil had been unstable from mining and the pure vegetation had been stripped, so land managers planted kudzu — a viney, invasive species — and privet, a plant that has been described as “worse than kudzu.” Kudzu vines had pulled down bushes and the land was plagued by fallen wooden and infested with ticks. The kudzu and privent could have added some shade and stability, however a lot of it wanted to be eliminated once more to construct trails.
RideBHM used skid steerers to take away as a lot of the privet as potential and opened up the forest cover above and the dust canvas under.
A imaginative and prescient for the park
Hughes and King didn’t must look too far for inspiration. After touring the nation, and visiting bike parks shut by and afar, they knew what they needed: an accessible and beginner-friendly bike park, near a significant city middle, with one thing for everybody.
The 2 beloved using the Windrock Bike Park, however there isn’t a straightforward manner down the mountain, Hughes stated. And Experience Kanuga has a very good unfold, however the 500′ climb could be an excessive amount of for some riders. However, there was one path at Experience Kanuga that Hughes and King fell in love with.
“Will need to have Tortuga,” they instructed one another the primary time they rode at Kanuga. The flowy, blue-rated bounce path has clean berms, catapulting-lips, and broad landings. RideBHM will need to have jumps, they insisted, and it will need to have a bounce path like Tortuga.
After approaching Experience Kanuga for recommendation, the path builders from the North Carolina bike park got here right down to Birmingham to construct one thing that mirrored the enjoyable. RideBHM referred to as their new blue path Kanuga.
Additionally they took inspiration from the Purple Bull drop at WindRock, a giant, speedy drop towards the bottom of the bike park the place onlookers can watch as they load up right into a shuttle to take them to the highest. RideBHM referred to as it Massive Bertha; it’s a giant step-up bounce that shoots riders into the air as they end their runs close to the parking zone.
The opposite massive precedence for RideBHM is accessibility. They need to expose mountain biking to communities that will not have seen it and make the exercise an reasonably priced proposition. Being a public-private entity and a profit company, they’re saving 20% of the obtainable slots in educational lessons for deprived youth, so children can take part and benefit from rental bikes and mountain bike training.
Following the opening of RideBHM at Purple Mountain Park, Hughes stated they’ve a number of different plans within the works and objectives for the park(s). They’re including a 3-mile cross-country monitor and should have short-track XC races, and want to add a mud bounce part and a pump monitor.
However, Hughes stated additionally they need to open extra parks in Alabama, probably in Huntsville or perhaps Anniston, and a season go would work at any of the places.
“Hopefully that is only the start.”
Alabama
NFL Thursday night: Former Alabama prep star comes through for Eagles in fourth quarter
Philadelphia safety Reed Blankenship made two possession-ending plays in the fourth quarter as the Eagles rallied for a 26-18 victory over the Washington Commanders on Thursday night.
Philadelphia trailed 10-3 after Washington opened the third quarter with a field goal. But the Eagles maintained their hold on the top spot in the NFC East by scoring on their four full second-half possessions, including three fourth-quarter touchdowns.
After Philadelphia took a 12-10 lead with 12:00 to play, Washington went for it on fourth-and-2 at the Eagles 26-yard line rather than have up-from-the-practice-squad kicker Zane Gonzalez try a 44-yard field goal to take the lead, even though he’d already connected from 45.
Blankenship and linebacker Zach Braun tackled quarterback Jayden Daniels for no gain to end the series.
The Eagles offense ripped down the field in five plays for another touchdown, and on the Commanders’ first snap after the TD, Blankenship intercepted Daniels at the Washington 46-yard line.
This time, it took only two snaps for Philadelphia to get running back Saquon Barkley into the end zone again for a 26-10 lead with 4:38 remaining.
Barkley ran for 146 yards and two touchdowns on 26 carries and caught two passes for 52 yards.
In addition to his second interception of the season and seventh of his career, Blankenship made 10 tackles against Washington.
Blankenship is a former West Limestone High School standout. During the Washington-Philadelphia game, 13 more players from Alabama high schools and colleges got on the field:
- Commanders defensive tackle Jonathan Allen (Alabama) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play.
- Eagles cornerback James Bradberry (Pleasant Grove, Samford) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play.
- Landon Dickerson (Alabama) started at left guard for the Eagles. Dickerson limped off the field after the third snap, but he returned for Philadelphia’s second possession.
- Eagles offensive lineman Jack Driscoll (Auburn) did not record any stats.
- Eagles defensive end Bryce Huff (St. Paul’s Episcopal) recorded one tackle for loss.
- Jalen Hurts (Alabama) started at quarterback for the Eagles. Hurts completed 18-of-28 passes for 221 yards with no touchdowns and no interceptions and ran for 39 yards and one touchdown on 10 carries. Hurts scored on a 1-yard sneak with 12:00 remaining as Philadelphia took a 12-10 lead.
- Noah Igbinoghene (Hewitt-Trussville, Auburn) started at cornerback for the Commanders. Igbinoghene made six tackles.
- Commanders defensive tackle Phidarian Mathis (Alabama) made two tackles.
- Daron Payne (Shades Valley, Alabama) started at defensive tackle for the Commanders. Payne made three tackles.
- Commanders safety Jeremy Reaves (South Alabama) made two tackles on special teams.
- Eagles cornerback Eli Ricks (Alabama) was designated as a game-day inactive.
- Brian Robinson Jr. (Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa, Alabama) started at running back for the Commanders. After missing two games because of a hamstring injury, Robinson ran for 63 yards and one touchdown on 16 carries and caught a 9-yard pass. Robinson scored the game’s first points on a 1-yard run with 3:26 left in the first quarter.
- Commanders offensive tackle Trent Scott (Lee-Huntsville) did not record any stats.
- DeVonta Smith (Alabama) started at wide receiver for the Eagles. Smith had four receptions for 29 yards.
- Eagles offensive lineman Tyler Steen (Alabama) did not record any stats.
- Eagles tight end C.J. Uzomah (Auburn) did not record any stats in his debut for the 2024 season. Philadelphia elevated Uzomah from its practice squad to make him eligible to play.
- Eagles defensive tackle Byron Young (Alabama) is on injured reserve and not eligible to play.
Washington (7-4) plays the Dallas Cowboys at noon CST Nov. 24 at Northwest Stadium in Landover, Maryland.
Philadelphia (8-2) plays the Los Angeles Rams at 7:20 p.m. Nov. 24 at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California.
FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE
Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter at @AMarkG1.
Alabama
Three Alabama Football Players To Watch This Weekend on The Joe Gaither Show
Let’s fire up a Thursday edition of “The Joe Gaither Show on BamaCentral” with Mason Woods as we dive into two notable recruiting notes, the College Football Playoff’s Week 2 rankings, the Crimson Tide secondary, the Mercer Bears and more.
The show opens with recruiting as Alabama suffered a decommitment from a prominant recruit. Is losing Caleb Cunningham from the Crimson Tide Class of 2025 a big blow? Who else is rumored to be flirting with decommitting from the Capstone?
We continue with the conversation as the College Football Playoff committee put out its Week 2 poll. Alabama moved up in the polls after destroying LSU, but did the committee’s choices make sense? Georgia dropped out. Notre Dame, Penn State and Texas are all ahead of Alabama, how does the committee make sense of the rankings so far?
The show then transitions into this weekend as Alabama football plays agains the Mercer Bears. Does Mercer have any shot at coming into Tuscaloosa and beating the Crimson Tide? We discuss what the Bears could do to threaten Alabama and identify our three players to watch this week at Saban Field at Bryant Denny Stadium.
The show can be seen on the BamaCentral YouTube channel. Keep up with each show on YouTube,Facebook and Twitter. Shows can also be heard on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon.
Alabama
3 bold predictions for Alabama football against Mercer
Alabama football has seemingly turned the corner after a difficult October that saw the Crimson Tide go just 2-2 and see its hopes of a national championship go up in flames.
But the beauty of an expanded playoff is that the second loss was not the end of the season for Alabama. All it did was remove the margin for error. Since the loss to Tennessee in Knoxville, Alabama responded with dominant wins over ranked opponents in Missouri and LSU.
Last week’s 42-13 win in Baton Rouge might have been Alabama’s single most impressive win of the season, perhaps more so than the home win over Georgia at the end of September.
Alabama now sits at 7-2 and seemingly controls its own destiny for the College Football Playoff, and sits in a good position to make it to Atlanta for the SEC Championship if things break the way most expect.
Prior to Alabama finishing the regular season with back-to-back SEC games against Oklahoma and Auburn, the Crimson Tide faces Mercer at Bryant-Denny Stadium on Saturday.
In last week’s bold predictions, we correctly predicted that Alabama would force multiple LSU turnovers. And while Jalen Milroe didn’t quite get to 400 yards of total offense, he was still the star of the game as predicted. The only real miss was Ryan Williams leading the team in receiving as Alabama’s passing game revolved around the running backs.
So even in a game that isn’t getting as much hype as the others, we’re still going to come up with some bold predictions that are guaranteed to be 100% accurate.
3. Caleb Odom scores his first career touchdown
Ryan Williams was obviously the prized WR of Alabama’s 2024 class, but Caleb Odom was highly ranked in his own regard and has unicorn traits. Odom has yet to be a big factor in the passing game, but he has seen his playing time increase in recent weeks.
With Cole Adams out for the season, Odom has more of a path to getting on the field. Against Mercer, if Alabama takes care of business, this should be a game where the starters are out by halftime. That should open the door for Ty Simpson to come into the game and run the full offense, and a guy like Odom could benefit from that.
I’m betting Odom finds the endzone for the first time in his career on Saturday.
2. Richard Young leads the team in rushing
I’m banking on Alabama coming out of the gate and playing well, learning from its lesson against Vanderbilt following the big win over Georgia earlier in the season. If that’s the case, there should be plenty of playing time for backups like Richard Young.
Young missed some time earlier in the season following an injury he suffered against Wisconsin. He’s been the No. 3 guy in the pecking order behind Justice Haynes and Jam Miller, but Young has impressed when he has gotten the opportunity.
He broke a 62-yard run three weeks ago against Missouri, and he found the endzone for the first time this season last week against LSU in the 4th quarter. I think Young will get a lot of playing time in the second half this week, and I think he’ll break a big run or two and ultimately be the team’s leading rusher.
1. Alabama finally scores a non-offensive touchdown
Alabama is fourth in the country in takeaways forced per game. It’s almost mind-boggling that they haven’t turned a single turnover into a defensive touchdown yet.
Either by a pick-six, scoop-and-score, or a special teams punt/kick return, I believe Alabama will find the endzone this week.
Ryan Williams looks explosive as a punt returner and if the Tide’s defense plays well then he should get a plethora of opportunities early in the game to make a big play in the return game. Williams had a 28-yard punt return last week against LSU.
I think it will be Williams who finds the endzone, but I won’t be surprised if Alabama houses a pick-six, either.
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