About

Most motocross coverage explains what happened. Table Over Two is interested in why: the decisions, psychological pressures, and strategic realities that determined the outcome before the checkered flag flew.

Motocross has a deep internal logic. Track position compounds. Pressure distorts decision-making in ways that are legible if you know what to look for. The gap between a champion and a contender is rarely talent — it's the quality of decisions made under load, repeated across a season. That logic almost never gets named. This publication exists to name it.

The vantage point

I started racing motocross at five. I came back to it as an adult in 2022 and still compete at the C class level in Michigan. The gap between what riding feels like from the inside and what it looks like from the outside is not abstract to me — it shapes how I read a race.

I spent a year covering Supercross and Pro Motocross for MotoOnline, reporting on-site at multiple rounds. Before that, I co-founded The Apex, an independent motorsports publication where I wrote over 1,500 articles and reported from dozens of major events across North America. A decade of thinking about how to cover racing at close range makes what most coverage leaves out impossible to ignore.

What you'll find here

Precise, principles-forward analysis of Supercross and Pro Motocross — the strategic layer, the psychological layer, the racecraft decisions that the broadcast moves past too quickly. The goal isn't just to explain what's happening at the front of the field. It's to make that explanation worth something.