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'Why Don't You Try It?': How The Oldest U.S. Female BMX Racer Broke Into The Sport

Max Knauer and his mother, Kittie Weston-Knauer, at a StoryCorps conversation recorded in April.
Grace Pauley
/
StoryCorps
Max Knauer and his mother, Kittie Weston-Knauer, at a StoryCorps conversation recorded in April.

Kittie Weston-Knauer, on the cusp of 70 years old, is the oldest female BMX bicycle racer in the U.S.

When she started competing in the late 1980s, she was often the only woman on the track. It was her son, Max Knauer, a champion BMX rider, who introduced her to the sport when he was 10.

Max, now 40, explains that he planted the racing seed after a frustrating day of his mom playing coach.

"I was having a bad week racing and you were giving me pointers: 'You've gotta pedal! You've gotta keep pedaling!' " he recalls in a StoryCorps conversation. "And at the time I was like: 'Well, if it looks so easy to you, then why don't you try it?' "

So she did.

On Mother's Day 1988, Kittie, then 40, entered her first race. "I borrowed your gloves. I borrowed your helmet," she tells Max. "And I rode your bike. I was hanging on for dear life. I didn't exactly tear up the track either."

"I said 'I told you so!' " Max says.

"True, but I tell you what," she says. "I had a whole new respect for what you were out there doing. And the other thing I said was, "Well, hey, this is something I can do!' "

In a photo from 1988, Max Knauer gives his mother, Kittie Weston-Knauer, a hand as she prepares to start her first BMX race.
/ Courtesy of Kittie Weston-Knauer
/
Courtesy of Kittie Weston-Knauer
In a photo from 1988, Max Knauer gives his mother, Kittie Weston-Knauer, a hand as she prepares to start her first BMX race.

"At first, I was a little embarrassed, I guess," Max admits. "But you know, after doing it a little while and we were traveling together, it was great. I thought it was really cool how other mothers really looked up to you."

But, he says, he was concerned because BMX can be dangerous.

"People always got hurt, break an arm, collarbone," he says.

Max recalls when his mom broke her neck in a racing accident.

"And then, seeing you in the hospital, it was pretty tough, especially considering the doctors saying 'Well, she might not walk again.' "

The injury left Kittie temporarily paralyzed from the shoulders down. "But I was very determined that I was going to ride again," she says.

Kittie returned to the track six months after the accident. She says people are surprised she returned to racing after that.

"And my answer is, 'Why not?' " she says. "As long as I can keep the two wheels on the ground, I'm good."

Since the day she took her son's dare seriously, she hasn't backed down.

"At my age, it is not about finishing first, second or third," she says. "It is about finishing. It is about being as competitive as I can and it is about pushing those in front of me to ride harder."

Max has since retired from BMX racing, but Kittie continues to ride today, racing all over the country.

"This sport, unlike any other sport, requires you to continue to be on your toes," she says, "and I don't mean just on the pedals — understanding that you're going to constantly be learning."

Produced forMorning Editionby Kelly Moffitt

StoryCorps is a national nonprofit that gives people the chance to interview friends and loved ones about their lives. These conversations are archived at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, allowing participants to leave a legacy for future generations. Learn more, including how to interview someone in your life, atStoryCorps.org.

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Kelly Moffitt