Arno van den Brink
Arno van den Brink covers professional motocross and off-road motorcycles for MX Vice, with a focus on race weekends, race machinery, and the riders who connect the two. His byline spans race reports, video-led coverage, and technical bike pieces, giving him a clear view of both competition and equipment in modern motocross. The through-line in his work is a factual, event-driven style that explains what happened on track while also showing how current motocross bikes are engineered and set up to achieve those results.
NEW BETA RX MY 2027
The launch feature on the NEW BETA RX MY 2027 shows how van den Brink handles motorcycle product stories. He frames the model around “The Art of RideAbility in the MX World,” then walks through the RX 250 4T and its all-new 250cc DOHC engine in precise technical terms. The piece keeps to clear specifications and functional details, underlining what the new engine layout and chassis updates are meant to deliver on a motocross track rather than drifting into lifestyle language.
That approach makes his bike coverage useful for readers who want to understand changes from one model year to the next and how those changes relate to riding and racing. The emphasis is on components, configurations, and rideability, not on brand slogans, which aligns with his broader pattern of treating motorcycles as tools for performance within a competitive context.
Romain Febvre runner-up in Argentina
Race reports such as “Romain Febvre runner-up in Argentina” illustrate van den Brink’s event-focused news work. In this piece he keys on Febvre’s second-place finish at the MXGP round in Argentina and reports it as a clear result story, with the rider’s position and performance as the core. The headline itself is stripped back to the essential outcome, mirroring the way he treats race coverage as a record of who finished where and what that meant on the day.
His broader race output follows the same pattern. Coverage like “Double Italian MXGP podium spoils for the Coenens,” written from the 2026 MXGP round in Montevarchi, Italy, again centres on the podium outcome and its significance for the Coenen brothers within that event. Taken together, these pieces show a reporter who follows the MXGP calendar closely and writes it up in concise, result-led dispatches that foreground riders and finishing positions over opinion.
Watch Lotte van Drunen Finish Second at High Point
“Watch Lotte van Drunen Finish Second at High Point” shows how van den Brink uses video and short-form pieces to highlight standout rides, especially from emerging talents. The story pairs a direct call to watch race footage with the clear headline result of Van Drunen’s second place at the High Point round, linking visual coverage and factual outcome in a single line. It reflects a style where the primary task is to surface a key performance, attach the exact finishing position, and point readers straight to the images that tell the rest of the story.
Similar video-oriented work is credited to him across MX Vice’s channels, with his name attached to motocross clips and race highlights as “Video: Arno van den Brink.” The author archive also sits in a “Multimedia” context, underlining that his role extends beyond text-only reporting into filming, editing, or presenting moving images from the paddock and the track. This mix of copy and video helps him capture race weekends both as documented results and as moving action.
James Stewart – High Point Rewind
With “James Stewart – High Point Rewind,” van den Brink adds a retrospective layer to his coverage. The piece is presented in a multimedia section and uses Stewart’s perspective to look back on High Point, connecting present-day race interest with the context and insight of a past star. In format and subject, it sits between straight news and feature work, combining a specific event focus with a more reflective tone drawn from a high-profile rider.
Alongside his regular race reports and launch pieces, this kind of rewind content broadens his remit to include the history and memory of the sport. It also shows how he uses known names to frame current venues and races, giving readers and viewers a reference point for why a track or result matters in the wider motocross story.
Volume and continuity at MX Vice
Van den Brink is a high-volume contributor at MX Vice, with an author archive that spans hundreds of pages of motocross coverage. His work ranges from international MXGP reports through US-based events such as High Point to technical coverage of new off-road models like the Beta RX range. The consistency of subject matter and the breadth of formats—race reports, launch write-ups, video pieces, and rider-centred rewinds—mark him out as a core reporter for the outlet’s motocross and off-road output.
4 more automobile journalists.
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Adrian Leung
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Al Pefley
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Aliza Savira
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