The last couple of seasons havenāt exactly gone to plan for Toby Martyn but the 20-year-old Cornishman ā one of Britainās brightest rising stars across all off-road sports ā is back on track and fully focussed on hitting his marks next year.
āMy dream is and always has been to be world champion,ā he said. āI got very close in 2018 which for me was definitely one of my best years. Not because of the result but because of how I surprised people and also myself. I went from fourth in 2017 to leading the championship going into the last round.ā
The championship he missed out on two years ago was the FIM Trial2 title ā the second tier of the sport behind TrialGP. It was highly controversial ā he ended the season tied on points with Italyās Matteo Grattarola who benefitted from what many thought was āhometownā observing at the final round in Italy ā and Toby openly admits this played on his mind the following season.
āWhat went on in 2018 did affect me a lot mentally. The year after I put way too much pressure on myself and I over-thought everything. I dislocated my shoulder at the start of the season and it went downhill from there so this year has been about trying to bring my confidence back up.ā
After dropping two places in the Trial2 rankings in 2019, this year Toby climbed back to third but didnāt show his true level until the final round where he signed off with a win at the Italian TrialGP.
āI think I just wound myself up. I started the season slow and lost a lot of confidence in the first few rounds ā I was sixth or seventh going into the last four rounds but I pulled it around. Andorra was the second-to-last round and I finished that off with a podium and moved up to fourth.
āIn Italy I tried not to put too much pressure on myself. The first day I didnāt ride amazing and was fourth but on the second day I was unstoppable really. I proper had a rocket up my arse. It was good to prove to people that I could still win because I hadnāt for two years. Everyone knew I could do it but I needed that win to get my confidence going.
āItās given me a huge amount of momentum going into the winter because it did get to the stage where I was asking myself āam I a fourth-placed rider ā is that my level?ā. To have that win behind me is awesome and you canāt beat that motivation.ā
Following three changes of machinery in the last three years, for 2021 Tobyās staying with TRRS with factory support and has set himself a clear goal.
āMy aim is to get the [Trial2] title next year and then to move up. I donāt want to rush up into the top class. Iām better off getting my riding up to a level where I can go into TrialGP and get decent results instead of finishing at the bottom every weekend.
āIāve always proved to be better in harder competitions where the guys Iām up against are better than me. Look at Sheffield [Indoor Trial] ā I went into that just aiming to get through a few sections. I have got the level but I wasnāt thinking about the result so to beat James Dabill and Jeroni [Fajardo] was great.
āTrialGP is so hard you can just focus all day on every single section. You donāt have to worry about other peopleās results ā you can just ride ā but for now Iāve got unfinished business in Trial2.ā