Professional Motocross and Supercross Racer

Since 2009, I’ve competed at the top level of the sport while providing high-quality brand representation for my sponsors and consideration to my fans.

The beginning

My journey first started on four wheels (ATV) at age five and my love for the sport quickly grew. After switching to two wheels (bikes) at age ten, and already having a burning passion for racing, I knew I wanted to pursue a professional motocross career.

This vision came to life in May 2009, as I earned my professional competition license.

The ride

In almost 14 years of professional competing, I lived the highest moments of glory, satisfaction, and happiness but I’ve also been challenged, injured, exhausted, and sometimes even felt hopeless. The beauty of it all was that, no matter what the circumstances, I kept going, getting stronger and better.

In the end, I gained priceless experience and important lessons that made me want to help others perform at the top level of this exciting sport. I started using my position as a professional rider to give back to the heart of the sport by putting on riding clinics throughout the United States at premier riding facilities.

Creating and managing my own racing team allowed me to get unique knowledge about all sides of the business, not only from the professional rider's point of view. Promoting myself and the sport was an important part of the activity, with the goal of acquiring sponsors and providing them with high-quality brand representation.

One innovative feature was to deliver a VIP experience to the fans of the sport. The VIP packages included tickets and pit passes, team-branded amenities, VIP pit tours, meetings with team pro riders and crew, and spending time in the VIP area; basically, having a “behind the scene” experience of a pro supercross & motocross team.

In 2023 I still compete at the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship while offering training to students throughout the country. The purpose of competing at the top level is to put the four fundamental chambers of “the 606 Factory” to the test. On-the-bike technique, fitness, nutrition, and mindset are the four areas that will produce better safety longevity and better results in the sport. It is important to lead by demonstration and walk the walk instead of just talking the talk.

"My hopes are to positively affect the lives of my students and fans demonstrating you can accomplish anything you set your mind to.

My intentions are to motivate others by leading a lifestyle that is balanced by fitness, a healthy diet, stress management, and positive reinforcement."

— Ronnie Stewart

The timeline

2023

Competing in a handful of Supercross races. Building The 606 Factory down South with exclusive personalized training.

2022

Raced the Daytona Supercross, various regional events, and the Unadilla Pro Motocross National. Became a father of two, as my daughter Sienna Adelaide was born on November 27th.

2020

Became a father to Easton John on September 6th.

2019

Became a certified USMCA (The U.S. Motorcycle Coaching Association) Coach.

2018 – 2021

Transitioned to a Supercross-only schedule with more coaching during the offseason.

2017

Largest fan section in MetLife Stadium history with 636 #rstewcrew fans. Earned third national number (#78), for the 2018 Season.

2016

Hired the only female rider to ever contest in Supercross. Brought on a fill-in rider while recovering from a wrist injury. Made it to all 29 rounds and doubled the size of the team going into 2017.

2015

Earned second national number (#88), for the 2016 season.

2014

Earned first national number (#69), for the 2015 season. The best Supercross finish was 14th place. 1 of 4 riders to participate in all Supercross and Motocross races.

2012

The best Motocross finish was 11th place.

2009

After years of making my way through the ranks of amateur motocross, I earned my professional competition license to compete at the top level of the sport.

The sport

The American Professional Supercross and Motocross series are the largest, and most popular, forms of dirt bike racing. They are known as the most competitive and prestigious series in the world, attracting the highest elite athletes in the sport.

Supercross is a motorcycle racing sport involving off-road motorcycles on an artificially-made dirt track consisting of steep jumps and obstacles. Supercross runs 17 weeks from January through May and is held in professional football and baseball stadiums in some of the largest cities across the United States. Due to the lack of space within the stadiums, the obstacles are closer together creating a tougher, high-intensity race.

The AMA Pro Motocross Championship is the major motocross series in the United States. Held since 1972, the 12-rounds series begins in May and ends in late August.

It includes stops at the premier motocross racing facilities in America, with events in California, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Michigan, Maryland, Minnesota, Washington, New York, Indiana, and Utah.

Each track presents its own unique blend of jumps, hills, corners, and whoops, but all the races run under the same format: two thirty-minute-plus-two lap motos (races) per class, with the scores from each race combined to determine the overall winner. The competition also tests fitness, as motocross at this speed is arguably the most physically demanding sport in the world.

The AMA Motocross championship roars into the natural outdoor tracks across the US as riders battle for the right to be called a champion in the toughest closed course, outdoor motocross tracks known to man.

JOIN ME ON INSTAGRAM

🏁

JOIN ME ON INSTAGRAM 🏁