Cycle News

Cycle News Issue 39 October 2

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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P122 CN III EMPIRE OF DIRT BY STEVE COX O ver the years in columns I've written here in Cycle News (the first one coming in 2000), and in myriad other publications, I've probably dedicated more space to the subject of contact in motocross and supercross racing than to any other single subject. It's a passion of mine, not because I think it's cool when people run into each other, but because it's the essence of the sport itself. When people talk about the greatest our sport has seen, most of the time they use words like "grit," "determination" and "tenacity." The greatest moto- cross and supercross racers in history didn't often sit around behind somebody for very long. If there was someone in their way, they either found a way by cleanly, or found a way by not so cleanly, but they found a way by. Finding a way by is the point. It's not a gentleman's sport. One of the greatest stories I remember about this way was in a Trans-AMA event in the late- '70s (I believe at Unadilla, but I could be wrong, as this is from memory), where Bob Hannah and Roger DeCoster slammed each other so many times that eventually Hannah dropped out of the race because his exhaust pipe was smashed so bad that his engine quit. That's extreme, but it's our sport. After the 2017 Las Vegas Su- percross, where Zach Osborne took out Joey Savatgy with one turn left in the race to win his first-ever professional title, I wrote a column talking about how amazing that was to watch. At Hangtown a couple weeks later, a Kawasaki partisan found me out on the track and pled his team's case, saying that he CONTACT SPORTS Rick Johnson agrees that MX is a contact sport.

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