Career
Before entering the entertainment industry, McCoy worked as a professional motorcycle racer and stunt manitoba He starred in Dust to Glory (2004), about a motorcycle race called the Baja 1000, and was co-director and producer of the military action film. McCoy began motorcycle racing at age four.
At age 14, he turned his motocross career professional.
In the early 1990s, McCoy took a break from racing due to injury, before returning to the sport and becoming the first motorcycle soloist rider to complete the Baja 1000 in 2003. Following his Baja 500 championship in 2005, McCoy was also invited to the X Games as an athlete.
During his first break from racing in the early 1990s, McCoy learned about filmmaking by working under director Joe Pytka. He later worked as a stunt performer, working with such directors as Tony Scott, Rob Cohen, and John McTiernen.
In 2002, as a producer McCoy worked with director Dana Brown (Step Into Liquid) to document the Baja 1000 in the film Dust to Glory.
The Baja 1000 is a 1000-mile car, truck, and motorcycle race in Mexico, which McCoy was the first person to complete on a motorcycle without switching drivers during the race. In 2005, McCoy he was nominated for Best Overall Stunt by a Stunt Manitoba at the World Stunt Awards. Following another injury at the end of 2005, McCoy ended his professional stunt career and opened up his own production company, Bandito Brothers, with Scott Waugh.
In addition to full features, McCoy has also produced and directed transmedia commercial projects including ad campaigns and short films for Ford, Bayerische Motoren Werke, Toyota, Kia, National Association of Stock Car Auto Racing, Mountain Dew, the United States. Navy, United States. Marines Corps, Entertainment and Sports Programming Network, and Hot Wheels.
In 2012, McCoy co-directed Acting of Valor, a film featuring the United States Navy SEALs, with Scott Waugh.