- Source: Alan Foster (BMX rider)
Alan David Foster (born January 18, 1970) was a professional American "Mid School" Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer and Dirt Jumper whose prime competitive years were from 1992 to 1999.
His nickname was "AF", his initials.
Racing career milestone
Started Racing: In April 1981 in Newark, Delaware at the Lums Pond BMX track.
Sanctioning Body: National Bicycle League (NBL)
First race result: First place in 11 Beginner.
First sponsor: JF&S Plumbing
First national win:
Turned Professional: September 1988
First professional race result: Fourth place in "B" Pro at the National Bicycle League "War of the Stars" National in Memphis, Tennessee, on October 15, 1988. He won USD$40 [equivalent to about $103 in 2024]. He also came in third in Pro Award, winning $22.50 [equivalent to about $58 in 2024].
First professional win: In "B" pro at the NBL "War of the Stars" National in Orlando, Florida, on March 25, 1989. He won USD 300, the equivalent of USD 521.64 in 2007.
First Junior Men Pro* race result: See "First Professional race result"
First Junior Men Pro win: See "First Professional win"
First Senior Men Pro** race result: Sixth in "A" pro at the NBL Silver City Sensation National in Meridien, Connecticut, on July 29, 1989. He finished out of the money since the prize purse was only rewarded from first to fifth positions. The next day he came in seventh place, again out of the money. Hard times seem to have struck after that. He spent several weeks competing in Senior pro but not making the mains. Seven Weeks, 15 races without transferring out to the qualifying motos. As a result, after making the mains in "All Pro" (which was what the NBL was calling its Senior Pro class at the time. Junior Pro was "Superclass") at the NBL Cape Cod Classic in Cape Cod, Maryland, on June 16, 1990, at which come in 5th, he reclassified back to Junior pro in July 1990 due to being uncompetitive in the Senior division. His first race as junior pro again was in "A" pro at the ABA Midwest Nationals in Rockford, Illinois, on July 21, 1990. He came in sixth. He transferred back to Senior pro in approximately July 1991, approximately one year after he reclassified back to junior pro. However, once again he had a hard time in the Senior Pro division and reclassified again, racing in Superclass division at the NBL Grandnational in Louisville, Kentucky, on September 1, 1991. In all the time he had spent in Senior pro since July 29, 1989, and prior to the 1992 ABA Grandnationals the total number of Alan Foster making the mains was five. He turn back to the Senior Pro class to stay in 1992 at the ABA Gold Cup finals in October 1992 in Reno, Nevada.
First Senior Men Pro win: In "AA" Pro at the ABA So. Cal. Nationals in Del Mar, California, on January 23, 1993.
Retired: August 2003. The last race was the Downhill Class at the X-Games. He states that he simply lost the desire.
Height and weight: Ht:5'11" Wt:190 lbs (1993).
= Sponsors
=Amateur
JF&S Plumbing: 1982-1983
Wheel Power Bike Shop: 1983-September 1989. He would turn pro with this sponsor.
Professional
Wheel Power Bike Shop: 1983-September 1989. Wheel Power dropped their team after the 1989 NBL Grandnationals
Huntington Valley Schwinn: 1989-Late Summer 1990
Slam Designs: October 1990-December 1990
ELF (Extra Light Frames) Manufacturing: December 1990-November 1992
TNT Racing: November 1992-April 1993
Airwalk: May 1993-Mid 1994
Schwinn/Airwalk: Mid 1994-December 1997
Airwalk/XS: December 1997-December 1998
Airwalk/Free Agent: December 1998 – 2002 His first race for Airwalk/Free agent was the NBL Christmas Classic.
Felt Bicycles: February 10, 2003–Present He was hired as Team manager and racer. In September 2006 he was named Assistant Product Manager for Felt BMX
= Titles
=Amateur
National Bicycle Association (NBA)
None
National Bicycle League (NBL)
American Bicycle Association (ABA)
Fédération Internationale Amateur de Cyclisme (FIAC)*
None
International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)*
None
Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)*
None
Professional
National Bicycle Association (NBA)
None
National Bicycle League (NBL)
American Bicycle Association (ABA)
United States Bicycle Motocross Association (USBA)
None
International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)*
None
Fédération Internationale Amateur de Cyclisme (FIAC)*
None (FIAC did not have a strictly professional division during its existence) (defunct).
Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)*
= BMX product lines
=1996 Airwalk Foster Bros. Signature shoes.
= Significant injuries
=Broken collarbone at the NBL South Park National in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1986. He fractured it again six weeks later after crashing again practicing at the Howard County, Maryland ABA track.
Ruptured spleen in January 1989 at the Magnolia jumps in Huntington Beach, California. Headtube broke off of a prototype ELF frame.
He was injured in a crash with Steve Veltman in a 1996 ABA Gold Cup race in York, Pennsylvania. He spent several days in the hospital.
Broke two ribs in a fall at the NBL Indianapolis Nationals in Indianapolis, Indiana, on the weekend of June 27–28, 1997. At this time he was recovering from dental surgery. He was expected at the time to rocover before the NBL Grandnational.
Bruised his coccyx at a national in May 1999
Crushed a vertebra and broke two more as well as broke two ribs and various minor injuries when he landed face first while jumping at Sheep Hills dirt-jumping riding area in Costa Mesa, California, on April 11, 2009. He underwent trauma care and later surgery on the following Monday, April 13.
= Miscellaneous and trivia
=Along with John Purse and Brian Lopes, Alan Foster is credited with bringing back the full face helmet, with a rigid structure to protect the jaw and the lower front half of the head, into BMX in the summer of 1996 after it fell out of fashion in the mid-1980s. While not mandatory in either the ABA or the NBL, most BMX racers, amateur and professional, have adopted it.
Other significant sibling combinations in BMX
Brent & Brian Patterson
Ronnie & Richie Anderson
Mike & Eddy King
Eric & Robby Rupe
Post BMX career
BMX press magazine interviews and articles
"Speed Secrets: Double Jumps" BMX Plus! June 1991 Vol.14 No.6 pg.20 Joint article about how to speed jump efficiently with fellow racer Brian Lopes.
"Foster Bros." Go August 1991 Vol.2 Iss.10 pg.52 Two separate interviews of Alan and his brother Brian Foster.
"The Foster Files" BMX Plus! March 1993 Vol.16 No.3 pg.63 Joint interview with his brother Brian Foster.
"alan foster" Snap BMX Magazine March/April 1996 Vol.3 Iss.2 No.9 pg.32
"Alan Foster" Snap BMX Magazine June 2000 Vol.7 Iss.6 No.44 (Centerfold poster back)
"Get a Job: Alan Foster and the Team Manager Gig" RideBMX September 2001 Vol.10 Iss.9 No.64 pg.56
BMX magazine covers
Bicycle Motocross News:
None (defunct)
Minicycle/BMX Action & Super BMX:
None
Bicycle Motocross Action & Go:
BMX Plus!:
August 1991 Vol.14 No.8 with (uncredited) Tim "Fuzzy" Hall (6) and unidentified rider (8).
March 1993 Vol.16 No.3 (4) with brother Brian Foster (6). In bottom insert Mike King.
November 1993 Vol.16 No.11 (16) on the inside with Tim Strelecki (4)
May 1994 Vol.17 No.5 (4) in third behind Gary Ellis (1) in the lead and brother Brian Foster in second.
November 1994 Vol.17 No.11 (4) with Kendall Burlson (4, extreme left), Greg Romero (3) to Alan's right and In Hee Lee (GT, No number plate) to his left. In top inset freestyler Matt Hoffman. In bottome inset Racing tire shoot out.
Total BMX:
None
Bicycles and Dirt:
None
Ride BMX Magazine:
Snap BMX Magazine & Transworld BMX:
Snap November/December 1996 Vol.3 Iss.6 No.13 (9) behind Wade Bootes (66).
Snap May 1999 Vol.6 Iss.3 No.31
BMX World:
ABA Action, American BMXer, BMXer (the official BMX publication of the ABA under three different names):
Notes
External links
The American Bicycle Association (ABA) Website.
The National Bicycle League (NBL) Website.
bmxonline.com article
BMX mania interview at the Wayback Machine (archived November 13, 2006)
EXPN.com 2002 Athletes Bio.
Bmxmania.com interview at the Wayback Machine (archived November 13, 2006)
"Alan Foster retirement interview" December 11, 2003