He added the three-day event is expected to draw in about 100,000 people, but it’ll also be broadcast nationally through its partnership with ABC and ESPN. Salt Lake County officials estimate that it will generate “tens of millions of dollars” in economic impact. The event will also include local and soon-to-be locals. Hannah Roberts, a […]
He added the three-day event is expected to draw in about 100,000 people, but it’ll also be broadcast nationally through its partnership with ABC and ESPN. Salt Lake County officials estimate that it will generate “tens of millions of dollars” in economic impact.
The event will also include local and soon-to-be locals. Hannah Roberts, a six-time world champion BMX competitor, as well as an X Games and Olympic medalist, said she’s in the process of moving to Salt Lake County. She’s thrilled to compete close to her new home later this year.
Thirty years later, she’s now the mayor of Salt Lake City, which will host a major X Games event for the first time in late June.
“It is a new chapter for X Games,” he said. “It’s really exciting because we have a global fanbase, but we haven’t taken our sport to our global fanbase since 2013.”
Thursday’s announcement also comes as X Games enters the beginning of a “new golden era” in action sports, said broadcaster Brandon Graham.
Thursday’s announcement was about a decade in the making. Larry Mullenax, CEO of the Utah State Fair Corporation, said X Games was on a list of major events that the Utah State Fairpark had circled about nine years ago as a must-have event to host.
Tickets will go on sale next month.
Adding to a growing sports scene
SALT LAKE CITY — Erin Mendenhall remembers the first X Games in 1995. Seeing the high-flying action inspired her and her brother to build dirt jumps and use their rollerblades to grind on the curbs outside her old elementary school, hoping to recreate the excitement they saw on TV.
Mendenhall said it’s a “phenomenal time” to be a sports fan in Salt Lake City, as it joins last year’s addition of the NHL last year, while the Winter Olympics are slated to return in 2034.

“We’re going to bring back a lot of the legends, people who helped shape this iconic brand,” Bloom said, standing in the Grand Building while a few children in attendance clutched the skateboards they brought with them. “We know this community will embrace this because there’s such a great amount of action sports athletes here, and fans of our sports.”
A new golden era for the X Games?
It will bring over 100 of the top BMX, Moto X and skateboarding athletes in the world in an “invite-only” format, who will compete for more than million in prize money. The list will include skateboarding legend Ryan Sheckler who has been sidelined with injuries. Sheckler flew in from California to announce he plans to compete in the event, ending a multiyear hiatus from the sport.
“For me, I’ve always been trying to get people to understand that they can apply that to their everyday life,” he said. “They can use skateboarding as an outlet to benefit and enrich their life.”
MSP Sports Capital — the owner of the Formula One McLaren Racing team and multiple global sports franchises — acquired the X Games from ESPN in 2022. Its new owners are in the process of turning a one-time annual event into a series of global events, including an expansion to Utah for the first time. Bloom said Salt Lake City will be a “really important jumping-off point” in the process.
It’s not the only major event coming to Salt Lake City in June. Red Bull announced on Wednesday that it will host one of its soapbox derby events in Salt Lake City for the first time on June 14. Utah Gov. Spencer Cox called that an example of how Utah is quickly becoming a “state of extreme sport.”
He told KSL.com that Salt Lake City could also be an option for a new multiteam league format that the organization plans to launch next year, too.
As it stands, the June event is a one-time deal. However, Sen. Scott Sandall, R-Tremonton, who also leads the Utah Fairpark board, said he hopes to make it a regular occurrence. Bloom said those conversations are ongoing, but X Games is interested.
Part of the plan is getting kids “excited” about action sports again, much like the first event did for Mendenhall, Sheckler said. He said he’s stoked to return to action later this year, hoping it can inspire the next generation of athletes. He also believes it can help people learn how to overcome challenges and failures.
X Games executives and athletes pose for a photo with local and state leaders after announcing X Games will come to Salt Lake City in June during a press conference at the Utah State Fairpark on Thursday. (Carter Williams, KSL.com)
The action sports giant plans to hold a three-day event at the Utah State Fairpark, X Games CEO Jeremy Bloom announced during an event at the facility on Thursday. The event — taking place June 27-29 — will mirror a pair of other global events already announced for Oaska, Japan and Sacramento, California, this summer, as the brand looks to expand beyond its yearly format.