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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VOL. 55 ISSUE 39 OCTOBER 2, 2018 P123 thought it was a dirty move. Dirty or not, it won the championship. But the funniest thing, at least to me, was that as this particu- lar person sort of got off on a rant about how this dirty riding shouldn't be part of the sport, I was able to recall—at the exact same event, 16 years earlier in 2001—watching Kawasaki's Ricky Carmichael slam his own Kawasaki teammate Stephane Roncada so hard that, in Ronca- da's own words, "I thought he broke my leg." I pointed that out to the Ka- wasaki partisan, and they just shrugged and said the sport can't continue to be like that. And I couldn't disagree more. I said, "I don't think there's a single current or past champion who wouldn't have done what Osborne did in Vegas." So, recently, I was interview- ing seven-time AMA Super- cross and Motocross champ (and Team Puerto Rico team manager) Ricky Johnson for a story in the VMXdN program via Dirt Bike Rider Magazine in the UK, and at the end of the interview, I had to ask him about the Osborne thing. Here's what he said: "Kenny Clark, before I signed with Yamaha, it was in boldfaced type in Cycle News, he said, 'You show me a good loser, and I'll show you a loser,'" RJ said. "Zach Osborne's move wasn't personal against [Joey] Savatgy. My heart broke for Savatgy. But he froze up. It was his to lose, and he lost it. Zach took so many chances and hung it on the line, he had an opening, and he took it. He didn't do it to take him out. He did it to pass him and hit him, and that was the time and the place. The nail never likes getting hit, but the hammer always likes hitting." RJ continued: "There was a truck race a while back, and Brad Lovell hit my son [Luke] and took him out, and on the podium, Brad said, 'I didn't mean to hit him.'" I took him aside, and we're friends, and I wasn't mad or anything, but I said, 'C'mon, man, you meant to hit him, you just didn't mean to hit him that hard.' I've hit lots of guys, and sometimes I've hit a guy and it's like, 'Ooo, that's a little better than I thought!' "I don't blame Zach for it. He did what he had to do. It was racing. He came in hot and he blasted him, absolutely, but that's racing. Motocross is a physical game, and you have to know who you're racing against and what they're doing. If Sa- vatgy knew he was coming, he should've come up the inside, opened up the outside, and blasted Zach. Racing against Ron Lechien, what he would do—textbook—is we'd start the race, and I'd get a holeshot, and about four laps in I'd hear him making a push because he knew he was going to get tired soon, so he'd come in to try to take me out. What I'd do is I'd open up the outside by short-braking him like I was going to take the in- side, then I'd hit him on the exit. Screw me once, shame on you. Screw me twice, shame on me! "If I'm Savatgy, I know he's going to hit me, so I'm going to go in and bait him to the outside, and then as soon as he arches the corner, I'm going to get off the brakes and come up and take his front wheel out and win the championship. I'm doing peace signs the rest of the race, you know? I did that to [Jeff] Ward, I did it to Broc [Glover], I did it to Lechien, I did it to [David] Bailey... I mean, that's racing! And all of those guys hammered me exactly the same way. That's a part of our racing that we can't take away. Now, if you're jumping from one side of a triple to another, you can kill somebody. That's not cool. But in corners, it's all fair game." So, there you have it, from one of the greatest our sport has ever seen. Let the racers police themselves. If one guy becomes too much of a bowling ball, the other guys will sort him out. But otherwise, as my dad told me the first time I got taken out when I was 11 years old: "Don't leave the door open and you don't have to worry about it." CN

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