It was a daunting proposition even for the 34-year-old freestyle motocross and X-sports legend, who has done some pretty crazy things in his career. Among them: the first-ever dirt-bike double back flip, stunning crowds at the 2006 X Games; backflipping a motorcycle between two rooftops; and skydiving without a parachute. He won his first motocross title at age 14, and has been a dominant force in the sport ever since.
Looking relaxed and confident throughout the three-hour live event, Pastrana alternated highly demanding stunt performances with quick hits of on-camera commentary.
What inspired him most about Knievel? “Evel was never afraid to fail,” Pastrana said. “He never had a regret that I could see… He lived every day to the fullest.”
The Car and Bus Jumps
The first two jumps took place at a site set up behind Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino, Paris Las Vegas and Bally’s Las Vegas, For his first attempt, he leapt 52 cars, arrayed 13 abreast, as red-white-and-blue pyrotechnics shot up on either side. Host Matt Iseman announced the distance as 143 feet. In 1973 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Knievel had jumped 120 feet, over 50 cars.
“I’m actually feeling pretty good,” said Pastrana after completing the jump, despite the fact that he is rehabbing a wrist injury.
Pastrana made the jumps not on a lightweight dirt bike like the ones he has used throughout his celebrated motocross-stunt career. Instead, to best simulate the historic jumps, he rode a custom-built Indian Scout FTR750—an American motorcycle with a V-Twin engine that’s a modern-day evolution of the big, stiff Harley flat-track bike Knievel rode half a century ago. At 340 pounds, Pastrana said, it’s more than 100 pounds heavier than the bikes he normally uses in his more acrobatic jumps—with far more power and far less suspension.
“This bike is not meant to fly,” said Bob Sorokanich, deputy online editor for Road & Track during the broadcast_._ “It’s hard to accelerate, it’s hard to launch off the ramp.”
For his second jump, Pastrana soared 192 feet to clear 16 buses, compared with Knievel’s leap over 14 buses and 133 feet in October 1975 at King’s Island in Ohio.
Nearly five months before that feat, at Wembley Stadium in London, Knievel had attempted to jump 13 single-decker buses—which didn’t go well. He hit the last one, crashing in spectacular fashion and breaking his pelvis and his back. At King’s Island, after successfully spanning 133 feet, Evel announced to the crowd that he’d “jumped far enough.” He would continue performing, but never any longer distances.
In Las Vegas, the 16 Greyhound buses that Pastrana cleared are each 5 inches wider and 5 inches taller than the ones Evel leaped. Of the three jumps of the night, this one required the highest speed and the longest run-in.