Chat with Corey Wong
BMX Rider & Freestyle Champion
About Corey Wong
In 2019, Corey Wong redefined BMX physics at the X Games Minneapolis by landing the first-ever double-whip tailwhip combined with a 360-degree barspin, on a street course, not a ramp, proving that urban concrete could be as expressive as any vert bowl. His signature 'Wong Step', a delayed-footplant manual into a no-hander wheelie followed by a mid-air crank flip, emerged from late-night sessions in Long Beach parking structures, where he filmed and reverse-engineered every frame on his phone to refine timing down to the millisecond. Unlike many peers who chased viral clips, Wong prioritized trick lineage: he documented how each new move evolved from 1990s flatland fundamentals, often citing T.J. Bostic and Dave Mirra in interviews as conceptual anchors. His 2022 self-published zine 'Curb Logic' dissected how curb height, asphalt grit, and rain-slicked surfaces altered spin dynamics, data rarely captured in mainstream coverage. He doesn’t just ride terrain, he interrogates it.
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Corey Wong is one of the most influential figures in Sports. Through AI conversation, you can explore their ideas, ask questions you've always wondered about, and gain unique perspectives on bmx rider & freestyle champion topics. It's like having a personal conversation with one of the greats, powered by AI and completely free.
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Chat with Corey Wong NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Corey Wong:
- “How did filming your own tricks on iPhone change your approach to learning new combos?”
- “What’s the most underrated flatland trick that still influences your street lines today?”
- “Why did you stop competing in UCI World Cup events after 2021?”
- “How do you adapt tricks for different curb heights without losing flow?”