Sergio
Sergio brought an unmistakable spark to the backroom: energetic, upbeat, and steady under pressure. During his career, he became one of our most reliable throwers: disciplined, hard working, and always willing to take on a hard truck. This legacy endures today: A year after he earned it, Sergio still holds the largest (adjusted) truck record and the highest single truck score.
In his three-season career, Sergio consistently took the toughest assignments: heavy weight classes, high case counts, and trucks where the teammate size was stacked against him. He routinely punched above the expected BPM curve in hostile conditions.
Sergio's career was cut short by American immigration policy changes in 2024. Had this not happened -- had he not returned to Honduras -- there's no doubt he could have continued as one of our greatest throwers. Sergio's performance record speaks for itself: he was championship bound.
To this day, Sergio is remembered for his work ethic and for his kindness, humility, and the positive energy he brought into every shift. His time with us was brief, but the impact he left is lasting.
| Throwbriquet | Seasons Active |
|---|---|
| — | — |
| First Truck | Last Truck |
|---|---|
| — | — |
| Nationality | Home Store |
|---|---|
| 🇭🇳 | Walmart #2031 (Union City, CA, USA) |
| Trucks Thrown | Championships | Podiums | Career Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| — | — | — | — |
| Sub-Hour Throws | Two-Truck Days | Legendary Throws |
|---|---|---|
| - | - | — |
| Record | Metric | Held |
|---|
⭐ + bold dates/seasons indicate a currently-held record.
The following charts track three key performance metrics that measure a thrower's effort, pace, and competitive edge.
Together, these metrics strip away noise like truck size or teammate mix. They measure what’s truly in the thrower’s control.
⭐ indicates a thrower's personal best MPP, BPM, and Speed Bonus.
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The graphs represent the running cumulative average of a thrower's metrics across time and include only trucks where the thrower or throwing team threw 90%+ of the truck.
Trendlines attempt to reflect the behavior of a particular performance metric.
Minutes Per Panel (MPP) uses a LOESS trendline, a locally weighted regression that smooths short-term fluctuations while preserving the natural, nonlinear “learning-curve” shape of skill improvement over time.
Boxes Per Minute (BPM) uses a moving-average trendline, which filters random noise from day-to-day variation and highlights changes in throughput consistency and stamina.
Speed Bonus uses a linear-regression trendline, showing the athlete’s overall direction of improvement relative to normalized truck size and peer averages.
Together these trendlines attempt to balance clarity and realism, revealing long-term progress without distorting the underlying data.