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/125738
~OCA Hosts
~Intermount
TT
; Championship
o
~
~
By Larry Knop
w OGDEN, UTAH, July 18, 1971 - The
d Ogden Cycle Association held its annual
>- Intermountain Championship IT at Hot
() Springs today and the hot was very
appropriate; hot weather, hot racing,
and hot pants. A pleasant combination
for a Sunday afternoon.
Actually the racing would have been
even hotter if the weather hadn't been.
The small bore bikes in particular had
problems with metal seizing metal, but
there was always plenty of action. The
OCA spent a lot of time setting up a
good IT track, and the riders could
really show their stuff. A 100cc rider,
Del Brown (Hod), was the only Expert
who- could walk away from his class.
The 125 and 200 Experts had some real
battles. It took a 3rd heat win for Phil
Bernard (Dal) to beat out Pete erandaII
(Suz) in the 125 class, and for 200
Expert Kevin Croft (Suz) to take Phil
Hart (Bul).
These riders then met in the Small
Bore
Sweepstakes,
where
Brown
grabbed the lead and held it. Crandall
kept the pressure on though, and fmally
passed
only
to
suffer
the
embarrassment of having Del's 100
outpull his 125. Finally Pete passed
again, and this time he made it stock,
despite the challenges of Bernard, then
Croft, and finally Hart.
The 250 Expert go was another wild
affair. The third heat was a Woody
Lawhon (Oss) disaster. First Woody and
another rider crashed off the line,
requiring a restart. Woody worked his
way through the field, finally passing
leader Jeff Carson on the last lap. Then
he overcooked it. Woody ended up
contemplating the dirt after two
complete 360-degree slid-arounds while
Jeff motored by for the win.
The Open Expert class began the last
heat with Bob Brown (Mai) and Craig
Williams (Suz) tied with a lst and a 2nd
apiece. Craig got the jump. Bob had to
work his way past a couple of riders but
he was soon on Craig's rear tire. Last
lap, Bob made his move. He pulled
almost even with Craig, but then his
front wheel hooked Craig's bike and
that was it. Boomp, boomp, thud.
Williams took the win.
In the Big Bore Sweepstakes all these
riders had their leathers on again. The
ligh t wen t on and Dennis Spencer
(Yam) grabbed the lead. Dennis only
took 3rd in the 250 class, but he was
. fiercely in the Sweepstakes. He held off
challenge after challenge, but finally
yielded to Williams, then Brown. With
only a couple of laps left Brown tried
the same move on Williams again -.but
this time he made it. That was it Brown pulled steadily away for the
honors.
The races ran off with dispatch, and
as noted earlier, the scenery was
excellent. OCA did a good job, but part
of the credit for the races must go to
the Dusters M.C. The Dusters are a
brand new club, and they turned out in
force to help and learn some of the
ropes.
(Results on page 32)
Kevin Croft flies across the 12 miles of Utah desert to take a first place in the 2ooc.c elass at Cedar Fort.
SAICr'OI DEI'ED
Course Takes Toll on Scrallblers
By Terry Newfarmer
CEDAR F:ORT, UTAH, July 25, 1971
- Every desert c;ourse has that one or
two rough spots where you have to push
or plow through sand...but take a season
worth of these spots and put them
end-to-end, and you have the 12-mile
hare scrambles course of the Lehi
Challengers that defeated most of the
60 riders.
Waist-high sagebrush and six-foot
guillies marked the easy way to the
smokebomb, where the riders took on
the first of a long series of climbs up
through the junipers, on loose shale
sitting on deep powder dust. Many a
250 loaded up and quit on the leisurely
practice lap, to never make the start of
Lamar Walker took a first in the 100 class but
surprised everyone by sneaking in second
overall.
the race.
Author of the course was Preston
Gerber, Utah's champion of the desert,
who did the course marking on a damp
day with his 400· Husky - and almost
no help from the Lehi Challengers club.
"It looks like the Challengers won't
be putting on any more races," said
Gerber, as he related the events leading
up to'theJuly 24-25 weekend ofracing,
not sanctioned by the American
Motorcycle Assn., and hence not by the
Utah Sportsman Riders Assn.
"The AMA cashed my checks for a
club charter and two sanctions, but
after weeks of red tape we didn't have
either," he said. He described a series of
letters asking for five more AMA
members on the -application, copies of
constitution and bylaws and for a peace
officer to sign the application; all ending
in denial because the peace officer was a
member of the club.
The Lebi Challengers were scheduled
to co-sponsor the Utah motocross
championship in October.
But for the riders who braved the
96-degree
heat,
the
tough hare
scrambles
proved
to
be
plenty
challenging, and every finisher won a
trophy, although Gerber finished them
as they came in after the winner
completed his four laps, so the 125
winner had to only push two laps.
But the course could be ridden by a
good enough rider on a smaIl bike, as
demonstrated by 100cc winner Lamar
Walker, who rode the full four to finish
just two minutes behind the Overall and
Open winner, Dave Blaylock. Charging
in minutes after them was Kevin Croft,
who remains almost unbeatable on the
desert and the motocross tracks in the 200 class.
(Results on page 32)
It was Dave Blaylock's day in the Lehi
Challenger's Scrambles as he won overall.
Texan Scramblers Converge on Baytown
By Johnny Warren
ROMie Henriksen (Bul) in the fmaL .
BA YTOWN, TEX.,July 25, 1971 - The
In the 0-100 class, Wayne Stark (Suz)
best scramble race on the Gulf Coast are
won the fITst heat, Brad Hood (Kaw)
held every fourth Sunday in Baytown.
coasted to victory in the second, and
All motorcycle riders and fans will
Jerry Turner scored a win in the final.
agree. This track is the best kept and
organized in this section of the country.
The riders are free to let it all hang out.
Fans from all over the country came to
see Larry Haston, David Rush and
Richard Dillard, three of the top
Amateur riders in U.S.
Larry Haston, a veteran Texas
Amateur scrambler, pushed his 650
Triumph to a one-sided victory in the
By Terry Newfarmer
first heat and final of the 350-open. He
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH - The Salt
also won the trophy dash. Richard
Lake City Attorney has been directed to
pushed him all the way. But Dillard's
investigate the pOssibilities of the city
250 Bultaco was no match for the 650
passing its

