The FastMoto Supercross Champion Who Beat His Own Family to the Title
FastMoto Supercross Champion Tallon711 did not just win the title — he beat his dad bucko75 and brother Kyam44 in a family battle that saw all three finish inside the top six. This is the story of bragging rights, bench racing, and why fantasy motocross brings moto families closer to the sport every week.
TroyDesigns · 10 June 2026
Fantasy motocross is about points, picks, handicaps and leaderboards.
But the best part is what happens around it.
The messages after qualifying. The bold double-points call. The rider who saves your round from nowhere. The crash that wipes out half your team. The weekly bragging rights that somehow carry all the way into Monday, Tuesday, and sometimes the entire off-season.
For FastMoto Supercross Champion Tallon711, the 2026 Supercross season became more than just a fantasy competition.
It became a full-blown family battle.
His dad, bucko75, led early. His brother, Kyam44, was right there in the fight. And by the end of the season, three members of the same family had finished inside the top six of the overall FastMoto Supercross Championship.
Then Tallon711 came from fifth before the final race and stole the whole thing.
That is the kind of ending fantasy players dream about.
Unless, of course, you are his dad.
Final Fantasy SX Standings:
From Fantasy Fans to FastMoto Regulars
Like a lot of serious fantasy motocross players, Tallon711 and his family first got hooked through PulpMX Fantasy.
“We all started with PulpMX Fantasy and we were hooked straight away,” he said. “It made it more exciting to watch, because you’re not just looking at the leaders — you’re looking at the whole scoreboard.”
That is one of the best parts of fantasy motocross. Suddenly, the whole race matters.
The battle for 12th matters. The LCQ matters. A rider charging through the pack matters. A privateer sneaking into the main can change your night. One final-lap pass can be the difference between winning your league for the week or copping abuse in the group chat.
When international players could no longer play PulpMX, the family started looking for another option.
That is when they found FastMoto.
“FastMoto and the format just made sense, and we have been hooked ever since,” Tallon711 said.
And one part of the format stood out straight away.
“The LCQ made it an amazing watch.”
A Family Fight Every Week
For Tallon711, bucko75 and Kyam44, FastMoto turned every Supercross round into a second race happening inside the family.
There was the real race on track.
Then there was their race on the FastMoto leaderboard.
“My dad was leading for the first few weeks and did not let us forget it,” Tallon711 said. “My brother and I were going back and forth each week, rubbing it in each other’s face when we did better that week.”
That is exactly what fantasy sport is supposed to do.
It gives families, mates, riding crews and work groups another reason to care. Another reason to message during the night. Another reason to study qualifying. Another reason to watch the LCQ like it is a main event.
And most importantly, another reason to talk smack.
During the season, bucko75 apparently had the loudest voice in the house.
“If you’re talking during the season, it was my dad,” Tallon711 said.
But since the championship ended, the roles have changed.
“Now it is definitely me. I will never let him forget it.”
Fair enough too.
When you win the whole thing, the bragging rights do not expire.
The Strategy Behind the Win
Tallon711 did not build his championship on reckless picks or wild guesses.
For most of the season, he played it smart.
“I think I was fairly conservative with my picks throughout the year,” he said.
But late in the season, he spotted an opportunity that helped swing the championship.
Chase Sexton was not getting starts.
That could be a disaster in normal race terms. But in FastMoto, with double points and Hard Charger points in play, it became a weapon.
“In the last few rounds, I noticed Sexton just could not get a start to save his life, so I kept using him as my double points and got lots of Hard Charger points to make up a lot of points on the leaders,” Tallon711 said.
That is where FastMoto gets interesting.
It is not always about picking the most obvious winner. It is about reading the race, understanding the format, and knowing where the points can come from. A bad start from the right rider can become a fantasy opportunity. A hard charge through the field can be just as valuable as a clean race out front.
For Tallon711, that strategy helped him close the gap when it mattered most.
Fifth Before the Final Race. Champion the Next Morning.
Going into the final race, Tallon711 did not think the overall title was realistic.
“I was in fifth before the final race and didn’t think I had a chance to jump up to first,” he said.
But fantasy motocross can turn quickly.
One rider gets a bad start. One favourite crashes. One double-points pick delivers. One Hard Charger bonus changes the leaderboard. One round can undo months of work or create the perfect comeback.
Tallon711 did not even know he had won until the next morning.
“It wasn’t until the next morning that my brother said I should look at the scoreboard.”
**From fifth to first.
FastMoto Supercross Champion.**
His brother Kyam44 handled it well.
His dad bucko75?
Not quite as well.
“My brother took it very well, but my dad didn’t take it as well, as I was rubbing it in his face that I swooped in at the last second and won,” Tallon711 said. “He still says I bring it up too often.”
We will leave that one for the family to sort out.
But from where we sit, bringing it up too often feels completely justified.
How FastMoto Changed Race Day
For this family, FastMoto changed the way they watched Supercross.
“Yes, it made me look into the LCQ a lot more and made them more exciting to watch,” Tallon711 said. “Feels like you’re on the edge of your seat sometimes.”
That is the FastMoto effect.
The main events still matter. The stars still matter. But fantasy makes the whole night come alive.
Qualifying matters because it shapes your final team decisions. LCQs matter because one rider making the main can save your round. Mid-pack battles matter because every position can move the leaderboard. A rider charging from the back suddenly has everyone watching closely.
Tallon711, bucko75 and Kyam44 watched the races together every week.
“We watch all the races together every week,” he said. “We will usually compare teams after we watch qualifying, unless it’s a day race as it is on at like 3am in the morning.”
For Australian fans, those day races bring another layer of pain.
“If it is a day race, we have to do our tips before we sleep and pray that it works out, which is going to make motocross harder for us.”
Set the team. Go to bed. Hope nothing strange happens.
Then wake up and check the damage.
Every Australian moto fan knows that feeling.
More Than a Game
Behind the leaderboard and the family banter, there is a deeper reason this story matters.
Motocross is part of their family.
“Motocross means a lot to our family,” Tallon711 said. “We grew up on bikes and my dad has been the biggest fan since he was a child and got us into it when we were growing up.”
That is what makes this sport different.
For a lot of families, moto is not just something they watch. It is something they grow up around. Bikes in the shed. Race weekends. Early mornings. Dirty gear. Long drives. Dad loading the trailer. Kids learning to ride. Everyone having an opinion about who rode well and who should have sent it.
Even as life gets busier, the sport keeps people connected.
“We never miss a week to watch, and it is a great sport to bench race during the week and keeps us in contact with each other.”
That line sums it up.
FastMoto is not just about picking riders.
It is about giving moto people another reason to stay connected to the sport, and to each other.
Why Every Moto Crew Needs a FastMoto League
When asked what he would say to other moto families, mates or work crews thinking about creating their own FastMoto league, Tallon711 kept it simple.
Do it.
“It’s a great sport for fantasy, and FastMoto has done it great with the handicaps and Hard Charger points,” he said. “A league makes it easy to talk to friends about the races, bench race, and obviously make fun of them when you beat them.”
That is the sweet spot.
FastMoto gives you a reason to care about more riders, more races and more moments across the night. It makes the sport more unpredictable, more personal, and a lot more fun when you have people to play against.
Of course, motocross can also ruin your weekend in a hurry.
“The sport is unpredictable,” Tallon711 said. “Sometimes you can be on top of the world and the next week two or three of your riders crash together and you’re pulling your hair out.”
That is fantasy motocross.
One week you feel like a genius.
The next week, your team is buried before the first main event is over.
And somehow, that is exactly why we keep coming back.
The Family Rivalry Rolls Into Pro Motocross
The Supercross title now belongs to Tallon711.
But the family battle is not over.
bucko75 will want revenge. Kyam44 will be looking to climb higher. And Tallon711 now has the target on his back.
So, is the FastMoto Supercross Champion coming back for Pro Motocross?
“Of course I will be playing Pro Motocross,” he said. “It makes the races so much more enjoyable and I can’t wait to beat my family again.”
That is the spirit.
New series. New tracks. Bigger gates. Longer motos. More chaos. More chances for the leaderboard to explode.
For Tallon711 and his family, FastMoto has turned race day into more than just watching the leaders. It has made every rider, every position, every LCQ, every charge through the pack and every family group chat matter.
And that is what FastMoto is built for.
Moto families.
Mates.
Work crews.
Bench racers.
Diehards.
The people who do not just watch the sport on the weekend.
They live it all week.