Cycle News

Cycle News 2016 Issue 18 May 10

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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CN III ARCHIVES BY LARRY LAWRENCE T he 2010s have proven to be a pretty poor decade to be a motorcycle racer, literally. Very few riders make money from racing motorcycles in America today, in fact, except for the few factory riders out there, most racers today end up in the red by participating in the sport. It turns out that's the way it's been for most of the sport's 100-plus year history but with a couple of notable exceptions. It's an especially tough pill to swal- low for some of the veteran racers of today, who were able to enjoy, at least the tail end of one of the golden eras of motorcycle racing in this country. For a decade-long period from roughly the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s there were actually quite a few pro riders making a very good living from rac- ing. Talking to riders and managers in the know, during that time frame there were several dozen riders across disciplines who were making six-figure incomes from racing and associated sponsorships, with a few of the elites making even more annually. It's safe to say that riders like Jer- emy McGrath, Ricky Carmichael, James Stewart, Mat Mladin, Nicky Hayden and Miguel Duhamel were likely the highest paid riders in the history of the sport in this country. As it turns out those salad days of motorcycle racing from the late '90s and early 2000s were an anomaly. Other than that period, and the Ameri- cans who made massive paychecks in grand prix racing, there was only one other period of motor- cycle racing where riders made a hefty salary and surprisingly, that was the first decade of motor- cycle racing. From the mid-1900s up to the advent of World War I, being a motorcycle racer in this country could be a lucrative profession. There were a couple of dozen American manufacturers bat- tling it out at the time and they paid top dollar for the best riders. We know this in large part due to the writings of one of the racers of the era, Arthur Chapple, who laid out in straightforward fashion, the pay scale of motorcycle racers from his era of board track racing. In a 1913 article in Motorcycle Illustrated Chapple spoke of the plight of the Class B or WHEN DID RACING PAY? P130

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