Cycle News

Cycle News 2020 Issue 17 April 28

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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P96 CN III BOOK REVIEW BY ALAN CATHCART many of which speak a thousand words. Check out Mick Doohan powersliding his Suzuki RM80 in 1976 at age 11, or Mick Cole on the mile-wide Honda CBX six-cylinder leading the vast pack into Turn 1 of the 1978 Castrol Six Hours, already by then the most important production-bike race on the planet, or, well, we're limited for space, so suffice to say that this book is almost worth buying just for the superlative photos, all 335 of them. A country whose Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser got noticed when he swapped the succession of Bultaco off-roaders he'd been riding for a KTM in 1977, Australia witnessed an explosion of inter- est in motorcycling in the early 1970s, fueled by the massive mining boom which put money in the pockets of young blokes in pursuit of speed and thrills on two wheels. Over 160,000 motorcycles— minibikes, off-roaders and high-performance road bikes, 90% of them Japanese—were sold in 1972 to a population of just 12.5 million, and in June RACE ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE T he much spoken-of but still undiscovered Australian Rider Factory must surely exist somewhere in the vast island continent, to allow a country with a population of fewer than 25 million to produce such a consistent array of world title-winning riders over the past half-century. We in Britain are now accustomed to seeing more than one-third of BSB grids occupied by Austral- asians—so yes, Kiwis too—who have traveled to the other side of the world to pursue their goals of winning races and championships, and all too often, they do just that. This book tells the story of how that came about. Though a healthy contingent of riders from Down Under had already become part of the Con- tinental Circus privateer community in 1950s-'60s Grand Prix road racing, it wasn't until the 1970s and the advent of the Superbike era—a class of racing founded in Australia in 1972, as its inventor Vincent Tesoriero explains in this book—that Aus- tralasians began to really make their mark on the global stage. This magnificent coffee-table sized volume recounts the often-amazing story of how that occurred, told by two of Australia's finest mo- torcycle journalists who were there when it hap- pened, and illustrated by a vast number of photos,

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