Cycle News

Cycle News 2020 Issue 21 May 27

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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THREE-TIME 500cc ROAD RACE WORLD CHAMPION WAYNE RAINEY P72 Interview fit. Ten laps is nothing, but I was exhausted after 10 laps, mentally and physically. "Going into the first turn, I just missed my brak- ing point by just a little bit. At those speeds though, an inch or two is a mile. So, when I flicked it into the first turn, I was off line, so I was off the throttle a long time. I had a lot of load on the tires. I was really bent over trying to get it back on line. I got it back on line and I tried to accelerate. It imme- diately stepped out and before I knew it, I was on the ground before I knew anything. Then I thought, 'Damn, I've lost the world championship.' "I was sliding across the ground, slid into the gravel trap, and I just felt like I was still going really fast. I was still flipping a lot because the gravel traps back then had speed bumps in them. I just thought, 'Wow. I hope there's not a crash wall out here to stop me,' because I was going way too fast. Just about the time I was about to stop, I felt a huge pop in my back. I lay there on the track. In my whole 25 years of racing, I had always almost every time been able to get up, no matter how bad I had hurt myself. But as I was laying there on that track trying to get up, I could only move my arms. I was confused. I could hear the bikes going by. I was thinking, 'How could something I love hurt me like this?' Then I felt my legs, and I realized that my hands felt my legs, but my legs didn't feel my hands. So the battle started." RIDING ONCE AGAIN "I really enjoyed that one opportunity. I had no desire to ever ride a motorcycle again after my racing accident. But one day I just woke up, one month before that event in Japan, and I just said, why not? So, Keith Mc- Carty at Yamaha put the bike together for me and I was able to go out to Buttonwillow. My wife was there and my brother, Rodney, and Paul Carruthers. I went out and rode; I remem- ber when I was done riding, Josh Hayes was following me. He was in gardening gloves. I said, 'How fast did we go out there? It felt like 150 [mph].' He said, 'You were almost doing 90.' The speed has changed a lot over the years."

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