Cycle News

Cycle News Issue 17 May 1

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

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/976068

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 132 of 133

P132 CN III EMPIRE OF DIRT BY STEVE COX with quite a few of my own. I became a bit of a master of taking guys out from in front of them. If there was a guy all over me and I couldn't shake him, one of my go-to moves was to fake like I was going to take an outside line and bait the guy into the inside rut, then I'd brake hard and dive into that rut before him. When I did it right, I'd clip his front wheel with my swingarm and he'd highside (usually pretty gently, since it worked best in tight turns, so speeds were rela- tively low). I'd come in with tire tracks on my swingarm probably once a month or so. But here's the thing, looking back at the history of our sport, there's a line between what has always been acceptable, and what isn't, and that line isn't always definite. For example, cross-jumping (hitting a jump and crossing into someone else's line in the air) other rac- ers is not acceptable. Neither is drifting into someone else's line while skimming the whoops. And the final no-no is the classic T-bone, where the racer on the inside of a turn hits the side of the other racer's motorcycle with his front wheel. Those things can TAKEOUT ISN'T JUST FOR DINNER A t the Foxborough Supercross a little over a week ago, Red Bull KTM's Marvin Musquin led the entire main event, only for Mon- ster Energy Kawasaki's Eli Tomac to sneak by as the racers got the white flag. A few turns later, Musquin took probably the only shot he was going to have on the final lap and just abso- lutely dirtied Tomac. And then the internet exploded. Most of what I saw was anti-Musquin sentiment, and I'm just left wondering what's going on with our sport. The first time I got taken out was at Perris Raceway when I was probably 12 years old, back in 1989. Another kid just came into this corner and cleaned me out. I came into the pits crying, "Dad, he took me out! Did you see that?! That's not fair!" My dad responded with seven words: "You shouldn't have left the door open." That was it. He had abso- lutely no sympathy for me. And I learned. I learned all kinds of ways to defend against those sorts of moves, and I came up Eli Tomac (right) didn't take kindly to Marvin Musquin's pass that left Tomac on the ground at Foxborough.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News Issue 17 May 1