Note: Professional first are on the national level unless otherwise indicated.
Started Racing: September or October 1977 at 13 years old in "Six Grade Class". His first race was at a district school race that was scheduled to meet once a month on a Saturday at
Corona Raceway in
Corona, California. Every school in his district including his Junior High School in
Riverside, California, would participate. The racers raced in their actual grade level and not in a BMX age class. There were no proficiency classes like "Novice" and "Expert". For this reason and that his parents did not want him to get a motorcycle is the reason Mike Miranda started in BMX.
Turned Professional: February 15, 1982, at age 18 the day after the
American Bicycle Association (ABA)'s Winter Nationals in
Chandler, Arizona.-->
First Professional win: In "B" Pro at the National Bicycle League (NBL) national in
Bakersfield, California, on May 30, 1982.
First Junior Pro* race result: See above.
First Junior Pro** win: See above.
First Senior Pro race result: First place in "A" Pro at the
National Bicycle League (NBL)/International BMX Federation (IBMXF) Magic Mountain Grand Prix of the United States on October 31, 1982, in
Valencia, California. He won
US$2,000. the equivalent to US$4,263.21 in 2007 (Cost of Living Calculator). He moved himself up from "B" pro to "A" Level he could have won nine more "B" division races before NBL rule required him to graduate to "A" division. The NBL management went along with his decision since he was doing very well in the "B" pro class at the time it seemed unfair to the other "B" level competitors. Miranda had 11 "B" pro wins with the NBL at the time in addition to a further four junior "A" pro wins with the ABA. This is in contrast with
JMC (Jim Melton Cyclery) which did start out as a bicycle shop and then began manufacturing its own BMX components including entire bicycles. He left CW because he was essentially tired with being with the same sponsor since almost the beginning of his racing career. Also his friendship with the owner Roger Worsham became more distant and the growth of the company gave it a less than an intimate feel. He cited these reasons for his loss of motivation. Pro
Pete Loncarevich replaced him. •
Torker BMX: January 1984–September 14, 1984. He joined
Torker to be a teammate with his best friend and fellow pro racer
Tommy Brackens who joined Torker a couple of months before. He left Torker because he had alleged irreconcilable difference with then Torker team manager Steve Johnson. As it turned out, Torker would go
bankrupt and let its entire team effort go two months after Miranda's departure. •
Hutch Hi-Performance BMX: September 15, 1984 – early November 1986. Left Hutch due to its inability to pay his salary because of the company's financial difficulties. This was a major disappointment to Mr. Miranda and false promises allegedly made by the management of Hutch caused him enough disillusionment with the BMX industry to take a two-year hiatus from racing. Apparently one of those false promises was the company's alleged failure to pay Miranda's salary and contingencies despite the hard work Miranda put into racing but also ancillary things to promote the company:I went to a whole lot of races. I did good that year - in '86. I won NORA Cup - which is by far the biggest thing that's ever happened to me in BMX. I went on tour-drove every mile in the motor home. Watched the kids. Did the clinics. Bent over backwards for Hutch in every way I could. All I did was eat, breathe, and live Hutch BMX. And he kept telling me, 'The check's in the mail. Check's in the mail.' And by the time it rolled around, it was four months behind, and that's when he let me know there wasn't going to be any check. No contingencies. No nothing. He just said 'Sorry.' I understand - that's business, and it's my fault not watching out for myself. Maybe putting too much trust in my friends. It happened and that was it. I didn't want to do it anymore. I didn't want to get burned again. after his sponsorship with Hutch Hi-Performance ended. Despite this however, he apparently wasn't happy due to the after effects of his sponsorship with Hutch BMX.I got an offer from Jamis.....but I just didn't want to ride anymore. I didn't have whatever it takes to say yes and do it again, I couldn't get up in the morning and train. So I got a job. Started working, took up golf - put a bunch of different things in my life that would take up the space that BMX had filled •
CW/Revcore/Shadow: December 1987-September 1988. Revcore/Shadow was owned by the same man who started and own its elder sister company CW Racing: Roger Worsham. Later Shadow was dissolved and the Company was left with only the CW and Revcore divisions. •
Free Agent/Vision Street Wear: September 1988 – June 1990.
Vision Street Wear and Free Agent joined the trend of two or more companies sponsoring the same race team to spread the financial burden. Mike Miranda left Vision Street Wear to head GT (Gary Turner) Bicycles's Juvenile Promotions Program.
Career bicycle motocross titles Note: Listed are District, State/Provincial/Department, Regional, National, and International titles in
italics. "Defunct" refers to the fact of that sanctioning body in question no longer existing at the start of the racer's career or at that stage of his/her career. Depending on point totals of individual racers, winners of Grand Nationals do not necessarily win National titles. Series and one off Championships are also listed in block.
Amateur National Bicycle Association (NBA) National Bicycle League (NBL) • None
American Bicycle Association (ABA) • None
International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF) • None
Professional National Bicycle Association (NBA) • None
National Bicycle League (NBL) • 1982 "B" Pro Grandnational Champion
American Bicycle Association (ABA) • 1984 Arizona State Pro Champion
United States Bicycle Motocross Association (USBA) • None
International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF) • 1984 20" Class Pro Murray World Cup III Champion
Special races, Invitationals and Pro Series Championships BMX Product lines • 1984 Hutch
"The Hollywood Series" frame and fork set and complete bicycles. :
Product Evaluations: ::
BMX Action April 1985 Vol.10 No.4 pg.38
BMX Action test and evaluation.
Notable accolades • He was the first "B" pro to win the Pro Trophy/Award class at the NBL national in
Lawrenceville, New Jersey, in April 1982. Neither Hill nor his loved ones voted at all for the 1986 NORA Cup balloting. Considering that Hill lost by three votes, it might have tipped the balance in Hill's favor:"''Yeah I didn't vote. My wife didn't and neither did my mom and dad. If we would've voted, then I guess, I would've won (laughter)
. ---Greg Hill May 1986 BMX Action'' What makes Miranda's victory such a stand out is that Miranda did not win a major race event up to that point in 1985 when the voting took place. • He had speaking and stunt roles (as in terms of simulated crashes, not freestyle) in the 1986 movie
Rad. • He was a camp counselor ant the famed Woodward Gymnastics and BMX camp in
Woodward, Pennsylvania, following in the path laid by
Bobby Encinas and
Perry Kramer of giving back to the kids what he learned from BMX. • He is a 1992 inductee of the ABA BMX Hall of Fame.
Significant injuries • Broke a hand at the 1983 East Coast National in
Bargaintown, New Jersey. Laid up for approximately one month. • Injured ankle sometime during August 1985 • Broke jaw while practicing in the street jumping a curb on his bicycle approximately September 1985. • Suffered a
compression fracture of the spine during the NBL's
Orlando, Florida, national on April 3, 1989. He misjudged the height of a jump and the front wheel clipped the peak of the mogul sending him over the bars and onto his head It was a career-ending injury. However, Miranda didn't know of the full extent of his injury until he had his back examined after weeks of persistent back pain. Both
BMX Plus! and Mike Miranda himself state it was an ABA race, but there was no ABA national scheduled in Florida that year. However, there was one NBL national held in Florida in April before
BMX Plus! made note of Miranda's injury in its July 1989 issue. • A jet ski accident during his 20s severed the tip of his right middle finger, leaving him with no fingernail permanently. • An unknown accident almost completely severed his left ear off, but with medical attention it was reattached and remains permanently deformed.
Racing habits and traits • He had a penchant for promoting pink as a desirable color for males in BMX racing despite it being traditionally associated with females. He went as far as to have a uniform in pink and white colors during his time with Hutch Hi-Performance BMX beginning in early 1985. He was probably the major reason for the approximately three-year (1985–1988) fad of male BMXers, both racers and in particular freestylist wearing neon pink uniforms or having pink and another bright colors like light purple, lavender and lime green incorporated in uniforms bicycle components including frames handlebars and accessories including tires. The highly respected pro racer
Greg Hill, who was sponsored by his own company Greg Hill Products (GHP) at the time also gave the neon color trend legitimacy when he too used the color pink in his GHP uniform
livery also beginning in early 1985. • His racing was prone to hot and cold streaks. In 1982 he broke onto the professional BMX stage by his near complete dominance of the junior pro class ("B" pro in the NBL, "A" pro in the ABA) by going almost undefeated on the junior level. He transferred himself with the NBL's permission up to the Senior division. He did almost as well in the Senior pro class ("A" pro in the NBL, "AA" pro in the ABA), beating such established veteran racers on a regular basis like
Stu Thomsen and
Anthony Sewell. This after never winning the expert class at a national during his amateur career. Then he went into a sophomore slump in 1983. In 1984 he was hot again but by 1985 his career was in the doldrums. He did not win a major race in any association (NBL, ABA, United States BMX Association (USBA)) during that year. This is compared to with his winning four races in 1984, the same number as
Tommy Brackens and Stu Thomsen won that year. • He was disorderly when he came to home organization, to which his room was in complete disarray with his clothes, bicycle equipment, Guitar case, and other items strewn about ==Post BMX career==