Three-Time Pro
Motocross Champion Doug
Henry Named
Grand Marshal of
Yamaha Budds Creek National
Finals
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AMA Motorcycle Hall of
Famer will be Celebrated 30
Years After Infamous Moment
at Budds Creek that Spawned
the Legendary Obstacle
“Henry Hill”
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MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(August 20, 2025) – MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.,
in conjunction with the
event organizers at
Budds Creek Motocross
Park, has announced that
AMA Motorcycle Hall of
Famer Doug Henry has
been named Grand Marshal
of the Yamaha Budds
Creek National Finals.
The season-ending race
of the 2025 Pro
Motocross Championship,
sanctioned by AMA Pro
Racing, will celebrate
the decorated career of
the three-time series
champion and Yamaha
legend, who will forever
be linked to the sport’s
progression to
four-stoke motorcycles
and one of the most
infamous moments in
American motocross
history, which took
place 30 years ago at
Budds Creek.
“We are privileged to
celebrate the incredible
career of Doug Henry,
one of the toughest,
most resilient, and most
talented racers to ever
throw a leg over a
motorcycle. His
decorated career brought
him multiple
championships and
ultimately earned him a
permanent place in the
AMA Motorcycle Hall of
Fame, but he will also
always be remembered for
what happened at Budds
Creek 30 years ago,”
said Ezra Beasley, Budds
Creek National Event
Organizer. “Doug is
still an integral part
of the racing community
and can be seen offering
his support at several
races. Moreover, he has
continued to showcase
his incredible
resiliency long after
his racing days were
over. There is simply
nothing that can hold
back Doug Henry. He’s an
inspiring figure for all
the adversity he’s
overcome and is more
than deserving of this
honor as Grand Marshal.”
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Doug Henry began his
pro career as an
unassuming non-factory
Yamaha rider out of
Connecticut, but a
breakthrough win in 1991
altered the trajectory
of his career.
Photo
Courtesy Racer X
Archives
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A native of Connecticut,
Henry began his pro
career in the late 1980s
focused on regional
events but made a move
to full-time competition
during the 1990 season.
He captured his first
career 125cc win as a
non-factory rider at the
1991 Hangtown Motocross
Classic, which
eventually led to an
opportunity with Factory
Honda ahead of the 1993
season and resulted in
both a 125cc East
Supercross title and his
first 125cc Pro
Motocross title, beating
out the likes of Jeff
Emig and Jeremy McGrath.
Henry successfully
defended his Pro
Motocross crown in 1994,
outlasting teammate
Steve Lamson.
Henry embarked on his
rookie 250cc season in
1995, where he claimed
victory at the Irving,
Texas, round of
Supercross. He carried
that momentum into Pro
Motocross, with a win at
the third round at High
Point Raceway. At the
following round at Budds
Creek, Henry was in a
battle for second
against McGrath. A
combination of factors
caused Henry to lose
control of his Honda and
carry too much speed off
the track’s biggest and
steepest downhill
descent. He soared
through the air,
estimated by some to be
70 feet high and 120
feet in distance, and
crash landed at the
bottom of the hill. He
suffered a broken back,
but miraculously never
lost feeling in his
legs. An innovative
surgery not only healed
Henry’s back but allowed
his racing career to
continue. The
spectacular incident was
captured on film and to
this day remains one of
the most talked about
moments in the history
of the sport. The hill
became the focal point
of Budds Creek’s dynamic
layout and has been
known simply as “Henry
Hill” for the 30 years
since the moment took
place.
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Henry's spectacular
crash as the 1995 Budds
Creek National remains
one of the most infamous
and memorable moments in
American motocross
history.
Video Courtesy
We Went Fast
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Despite the severity of
his injury, Henry
shocked the world with a
return to action for the
1996 season, now a
member of Factory
Yamaha. It was a
challenging comeback but
was all worth it when he
finished on the podium
in front of family and
friends at the Southwick
National, his home race.
He returned to his
winning ways in 1997,
capturing a trio of
Supercross victories,
and then made a historic
move for the 1998 season
that saw him become the
first rider to compete
aboard a four-stroke
motorcycle full time.
Henry made history
aboard the prototype
400cc Yamaha by winning
the 1997 Las Vegas
Supercross, but his
legacy within the sport
was solidified with a
historic 1998 campaign
in which he piloted the
four-stroke to the 250cc
Pro Motocross title on
the heels of five
victories. It proved to
be a turning point for
the sport as
four-strokes eventually
became the bike of
choice for every
manufacturer, ushering
in the current era of
450cc competition.
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Henry debuted the
four-stroke Yamaha in
1997 and went on to
compete aboard it full
time for the 1998 season
in which he won the
250cc Pro Motocross
title.
Photo Courtesy Racer X
Archives
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Henry stepped away from
full-time competition
following the 1999
campaign but raced
select Pro Motocross
Nationals through the
2006 season. He also
raced snowmobiles,
mountain bikes, and even
captured a Grand
National Cross-Country
Racing Series victory in
2005. However, he found
a new home as a Factory
Yamaha rider in the AMA
Supermoto Championship,
where he battled
alongside fellow Pro
Motocross legend Jeff
Ward. Henry captured an
X Games Gold Medal in
the discipline at the
2005 event.
Unfortunately, a
supermoto crash in 2007
left Henry paralyzed
from the waist down.
Despite the
life-altering accident,
Henry’s passion for
racing never wavered and
he became a star of
adaptive racing, earning
multiple X Games Medals
in adaptive SnoCross and
Snow BikeCross
competitions. He was
inducted into the AMA
Motorcycle Hall of Fame
as a member of the Class
of 2005.
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Henry carried the #1
on his Yamaha during his
final full season of
competition in 1999.
Photo Courtesy Racer X
Archives
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The Yamaha Budds Creek
National Finals will
serve as the 28th and
final round of the SMX
World Championship
Regular Season this
Saturday, August 23,
from Budds Creek
Motocross Park in
Mechanicsville,
Maryland.
Tickets are still
available and can be
purchased by visiting www.ProMotocross.com.
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For information
about the Pro
Motocross
Championship,
please visit ProMotocross.com and
be sure to
follow all of
the Pro
Motocross social
media channels
for exclusive
content and
additional
information on
the latest news:
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MX Sports Pro
Racing
MX Sports Pro Racing,
Inc., manages and
produces the world's
premier motocross racing
series – the Pro
Motocross Championship
sanctioned by AMA Pro
Racing. MX Sports Pro
Racing is an industry
leader in off-road
powersport event
production and
management, whose
mission is to showcase
the sport of
professional motocross
competition at events
throughout the United
States. Through its
various racing
properties, partnerships
and affiliates, MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.,
organizes events for
thousands of racing
athletes each year and
attracts millions of
motorsports spectators.
Visit
MXSportsProRacing.com
for more information.
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Pro Motocross
Championship
The Pro Motocross
Championship sanctioned
by AMA Pro Racing
features the world's
fastest outdoor
motocross racers,
competing aboard
homologated bikes from
one of eight competing
manufacturers on a
collection of the
roughest, toughest
tracks on the planet.
Racing takes place each
Saturday afternoon, with
competition divided into
two classes: one for
250cc machines, and one
for 450cc machines. MX
Sports Pro Racing, the
industry leader in
off-road powersports
event production,
organizes the Pro
Motocross Championship
series.
More information can be
found at
ProMotocross.com.
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SMX World
Championship
The SMX World
Championship™ is the
premier off-road
motorcycle racing series
in the world that
combines the technical
precision of stadium
racing with the all-out
speed and endurance of
outdoor racing. Created
in 2022, the SMX World
Championship Series
combines the Monster
Energy AMA Supercross
Championship and the Pro
Motocross Championship
sanctioned by AMA Pro
Racing into a 28-round
regular season that
culminates with the
season-ending SMX World
Championship Playoffs.
Visit
SuperMotocross.com
for more information.
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AMA Pro Racing
AMA Pro Racing is the
premier professional
motorcycle racing
organization for North
America, operating a
full schedule of events
and championships for a
variety of motorcycle
disciplines. It serves
as the sanctioning body
of the Pro Motocross
Championship.
Learn more about AMA Pro
Racing at
AMAProRacing.com.
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