Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles
Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/125721
NOW ABOUT THA
By Dave Swift
Viewed from a proper perspective,
Ttirry Clark may be the best desert rider
in the country. Armed with only a
100cc Harley-Davidson Baja, this
17-year-old high school senior has been
delivering solid blows to scores of
Heavyweight Experts, coming ever
closer to an overall win_ Last February
he finished fourth overall in an 80-mile
Hare & Hound behind such aces as
Larry Pfutzenreuter, Whitey Martino,
and Tom Muto. One month earlier, in
fact, he had beaten Pfutzenreuter in the
Lightweight European Scrambles on his
experimental 125.
The 1970 Trailbike crown was a
- hotly contested affair that ended in a tie
and Clark, although not exactly
bettered, kept his number two plate.
Now that Jack MO~l[an has moved to the
Lightweights, Clark seems to have it
sewed.
i met with Terry at his home in
Palmdale, California, a once-sleepy
desert town that has been
aircraft-industrialized. He is tall and
slender, easy to mistake for a box-boy if
his blond hair were shorter. He is also a
bit amused and perplexed about all this
attention being paid him.
"I'm bored with the desert... "
CYCLE NEWS: How did you start
this whole motorcycle thing?
CLARK: I used to race go-karts
when I was nine. Everybody in town
did, just like everyone rides bikes now. I
first started on 250's - my dad's BSA's
- and my first bike was a Yamaha 80,
then a Hodaka. I started racing at
Ponderosa and then, on a new Hodaka, I
went to a point run. I fmished 20th in
that race and won the next one. I didn't
lose a race I finished until I made the
Experts. (Note: This took ahout eight
months.) I rode a Hodaka until last year's
Barstow-to-Vegas. Then I got a
Kawasaki from the Roehr Brothers.
They didn't help me a whole Jot. I got a
lot of offers and I went with Harley.
CN: How do you like Harley now?
TC: Well, I had a lot of problems
with rings at first but now we go great! I
think they're about the best sponsor
going.
CN: Tell us about the bikes.
TC: I don't have a bike I own. I have
a factory bike I keep at home as a play
bike. I have last year's racer as a back-up
bike and a new one I've raced twice.
The bikes are kept at Filtron.
CN: Who does your tuning?
TC: Dean Goldsmith. He does all of
it.
CN: You never tune them yourself?
TC: No, I used to all the time with
the Hodakas.
CN: Would you like to do your own
tuning?
TC: I'd like to know everything
about the engine but I'd rather have
Dean do it. If H'!rley wanted 1De to, I
would.
CN: How "stock" are the bikes?
TC: Mine's pretty mild. It's not
really radical at all. No one believes it
but my Baja is about the tan:.est in the
desert. We like to keep it reliable.
CN: What do you like best about
your Baja?
TC: It doesn't really seem like a
trailbike. It's heavier and handles more
like a big bike. And it's reliable.
Two-strokes usually lose power during a
race but this one doesn't.
CN: What do you like least about it?
TC: The one I ride is perfect.
CN: Oh, come on, now. Surely
there's something_ ..
TC: Maybe one thing_ ..it's hard to
turn on a motocross course.
CN: Are you going to get on higger
bikes?
Terry Clark's experimental racer is
based on a 125cc Golden Wing, an
extremely successful road-racing engine.
Made in Italy by Aermacchi, the
subsidiary of Harle