Cycle News

Cycle News 2020 Issue 23 June 9

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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CN III ARCHIVES BY SCOTT ROUSSEAU T he current resurgence in off-road racing, particularly SCORE-type Baja events and the like, is well chronicled in the re- cently released BronWa pictures film Dust To Glory, (click here) which chronicles the adventures of several characters as they go through the trials and tribulations of racing the 2003 Baja 1000. Among those characters are the motorcycle winners of the first Baja 1000, both alumni of the 1971 Bruce Brown film On Any Sunday. That Dust To Glory pays respect to these two legends—Malcom P104 rately focuses on the exploits of Roberts, who returned to contest the race as part of a team that includes his son, Jimmy, nearly 40 years after J.N.'s first Baja win with Smith, which Roberts remembers pretty much as more of an adventure than a race. "Before that race, I was up and coming, and I was ridng a 350 Honda, which was a 250 Scrambler converted [bored out]," Roberts says. "Everybody tried to make 'em lighter, but they still weighed 350 pounds. Then the Huskys first came over in '66, and I went down to Tracy's Husqvarna in Burbank, and I bought my first one. I paid $825 for it, and my third race on it, I won an overall in the desert. Then I just kept winning on the thing, and the next thing I know, [Husqvarna importer] Edison Dye contacted me and said that Baja was coming up, and he wanted to know if I wanted to ride it with Malcolm." Roberts accepted the offer, not fully realizing what he had got- ten himself into. "I never got to pre-run it or anything," Roberts says. "Back in those days, just getting down there was a feat. The people that were going to be in the race went down there and marked their own course. They'd paint different rocks different colors, and there were so many different lines or different roads that you could fol- low. Half the time you didn't even know where you were. It was pick your own way, pretty much." Actually dubbed the Mexican 1000, that first race was run in two Smith and J.N. Roberts—as well as several contemporary Baja motorcycle legends, such as the Honda team of Johnny Campbell and Steve Hengeveld, is perhaps testament to the familial influence On Any Sunday had on Dust To Glory director Dana Brown, the son of Bruce Brown. That apparent respect for motorcycles and the men who race them isn't at all mis- placed in Dust To Glory. Smith and Roberts serve as an unintentional but fitting link to the two films made over 30 years apart. A portion of Dust To Glory accu- J.N. Roberts during the Mexican 1000 (aka Baja 1000) in 1967. J.N. AND THE BAJA 1000

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