Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1970's

Cycle News 1973 07 10

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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o .... I M .... ~ O· ~ >- "3 .., ~ W Z w ~ (,J > (,J Bryan Brecker did some eight minute laps and whipped all the Open Experts. by Scon Schafer VALENCIA. CAL.• July 1 - From the initial cloud of Novice dust to the sun setting on the minfuike rerun abou t 10.000 man-laps later, the Shutter and Lens people put on the'much-celebrated and 6-times famous Viewfinder's Grand Prix. The six-mile route ran through a mile of deep sand, took in most of the In te rn a ti onal MX course, crossed carb times, and to spice up the fast fireroading on tI1e edge of the cliffs that rim the park, the course included some sharp downhills that were a real gas. After the traffic jams in the 100-175 Novice class had cleared, the Brooks Brothers and Bryan Brecker headed down the start sandwash with lanky John Rice a bit back. By the time Tom Brooks romped over the last water crossing on the first lap, the news that he was cutting two minutes off the 12-minute lap times of the Novices had already reached the pits. Tom was slashing his Deek through the water crossings faster than his fellow Experts, but was far enough above the water to avoid having his feet pulled off the pegs by the impact. Most riders approach natural obstacles with some degree of healthy apprehension - Tom Brooks seemed unaware that anything was in Photos by Marcia Holley' his way. Midway through the one hour and forty-five minutes of racing he had retired - John R's Monark followed, with plug and/or clutch problems. That left brother Cordis and Bryan Brecker to blaze trail to the finish, as Jim Fishback had looked at the course from the back of an an tique Yamaha and made it back to the pi ts in one piece while Cordis went on for the win on his 100cc DKW. The 250 Amateur·Expert class finished the wrecking job on the soft-shelled course, whipping the straights into long frozen roller tracks and gouginll out cooking pits in the steep downhills. Jim Fiahback motored his CZ to the overall win ahead of Mark Adent, after Tommy Brooks again had to drop out with mechanical difficulties, this time on a b'orrowed bike. The 250 Experts got so competitive that some of the "sportsmen" cut out the last uphill-downhill, totally zonking the resul ts for a time. While the 250 Amateurs and Experts were beating away at the course, the winner of the 250 Novice class, identified as Rick Durand, was trying to coast out of the upper reaches of Indian Dunes Park. By mistake, he got the while flag instead of the checkered he had earned. Durand's CZ ran out of gas about three miles out on his "victory lap", and in coasting back down to the pits he took a wrong tum, bent his bike, and got lost. When the patrol finally found him, he couldn't believe he had -won. CZ riders are like that. The course reptile (Viewfindera Snakus) and the Playmate Pholdouts were gone from the "Jungle" on Sunday, but the course had roughened enough that the "snake" was no longer the most frightening part of it, and pits were offering a bit more visual sex than the minature slicks hanging in the bushes. The pipeline still made a good berm along the downhill at the end of the asphalt, but the steeper route was faster and le'ss tiring. The Oldtimers ended up going both directions on the same part of the track, as some chose the minibike course due to some missing markers. When the restart had become history. Spike Duncan had zinged his Yammie to the checkered ahead of Art McNamee on a vin \age G reeves. The Powderpuffers didn't get a chance to surf down the pipeline or bulldog down. the short dropoffs, but neither could have kept Marcia Holley from a convincing win aboard her Pen ton. Corrie Madison got her Husky by the fast-starting stunt girl at the end of the first lap, but bobbled and gave the lead back to the steady-paced Miss Holley. In takeoff on the Virgin Run, one of the stalwarts at Checkpoint two . dropped trou' as Marcia cruised by in the lead. With an attraction like a male nude, next year's Powderpuff will probably double in size and include a voyeuristic faggot or two! Kenny Alexander won the first minibike race, turning the last three laps on a flat fron t tire after the numher one man was disqualified for losing his silencer. Youngest Checkers c1ubber' John Welch snatched .!bird on an approximately stock Honda. The rerunners in the minibike race (Some parents felt it was too long, so it was mAISI"trt~ ABSORBERS FOR BOGESHOCK ROAD RACING, MOTO-CROSS AND ENDUROS COMING ON LOUDON STRONG When we say "Boge is absorbing America" we mean it. Boge shock absorbers are prominent in every facet of American motorcycle spon, from the lSOmph speeds of road racing to the bone-jarring bumps and grinds of moto-cross, enduros and desert racing.. Latest success for Boge came at the Loudon National Championship road race where our shocks handled the bumps and swervery well enough to help Gary Nixon on his way to a great double win ... for Kawasaki in the National event and Yamaha in Ihe Lightweight race. Switching to the dirt-tracks, it was Boge shocks that Dave Aldana fitted to his Kawasaki to win the recent professional short-track in Wash ington I D.C. Whatever your suspension needs ... Soge can absorb them. ••t.p.,.rtl ~~· 1731 So. Claudina Way. Anaheim, Calif., 92805, (7141 956-9681 . .~ !Rlulveda, 5ePUlveGa. Ca. Uust north of Parthenia)

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