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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/126041
BULLETIN.
RahierISmith
split in Italy
leil wails in
France
In what was ' described as a super
close race both m o tos, '. Gas to n
'Rahier (Suz) and Marty Smith
(Han) traded mota wins in the
Italian 125cc Grand Prix April I I.
First mota was Rahier-Smi th;
second was Smith- Rahier, Gas ton
was given the overall nod based o n
the fastest lap , while Jiri Churavy
scored third overall. ' On mota
finishes, this should put Rahier on
top of the ·125cc standings over
Churavy and Smith.
·In the French 500cc GP, an
evergreen Adolph Weil (Mai) went
1-2
over a mending Roger
DeCoster
(Su z)
5·!.
Gerrit
Wolsink was 2-4 for the day, third
overall. By rna tos, the top five in
each were: First mota - Weil
(Mai), Wolsink (Suz), H. Schmitz
(Puc), Willi Bauer (Mai), DeCoster
(Suz). Second mota - DeCoster,
Weil, Ake Johnson (Mail. Wolsink
and Bengt Aberg. Full coverage in
coming week~.
Baker breaks
Imola records
By Chris Carte r
IMOLA,ITALY, APRIL 4
Ste ve Baker, the bes pectacled
American who look s m ore like a .
college st udent than a motorcycle
racer, leads the FIM Formula 750
point standings after an impressive, record-breaking victory in the
"Lmo Ia 200. Baker set a scorching
pace in both' hundred mile legs,
beating Frenchman Michel Rougerie on
the Elf Yamaha by almost a minute in
the first and heading him home again in
the second by more than 34 seconds.
Britain's Barry Sheene opened " his
championship score by grabbing third
overall, after ' following Baker and
Rougerie home in each race.
'Than ks to ' the generous Imola
payouts
Baker
collected
around
Sl5,OOO for his Italian efforts, and takes
his winnings in the series t o the $50,000
m ark ! He deserved every cent of his
Imola eash as he , rode head and
shoulders above th e rest.
Gary Nixon, the championship leader
before the race, d id n o t qualify to start.
His Kawasakis we re ' lost in -transit, and
t ho ug h he was able to borrow Kenny
Rober ts ' spare Ya maha for th e final
practice session, he was no t ab le to lap
qu ic kly enough to make t he race.
Pract ice was he ct ic. More "th an 90
riders chased a p lac e am o ng the 4 0
starter s, and no fewer than' th e top IS
wen t quic ker th an t he fastest m an in
practi ce in 1975! But fastest o f all was
, Baker, and he left no ' d oub t in the
m inds o f the 120,000' fans that he
deserved first position.
Nixon was n o t the only shock
non-qualifier, either. Cliff Carr, Randy
Cleek and Pat Evans also failed t o lap
fast enough. Al l had problems of one
sort or another, but Cleek was in the
biggest trouble. His Bel·Ray / B.S.&W.
spon~ored
Yamaha was delayed in
transit fr om Caracas following the
Venezuelan F750 round and he missed
Friday's practice session.
Phil Read, Britain 's former 500cc
World Champion, who is keen to make
the grade in the F75Q series, qualified
for the race and then had to pull out on
Sunday
morning
after
doctors
confirmed a mild case of penumonia, a
result of his Modena crash two weeks
earlier in which he broke a rib.
The tension was overwhelming at the
start of the first 32·lap race. As Roberts,
Baker and Rougerie led the howling
pack around at the end of the first lap,
news came tha t Cecotto .' h ad crashed
halfway around, after a handlebar had
b roken off. Cecotto was unhurt, but out
of the race.
'
.
The Kaw saki duo of Mick Grant and
a
Barry Ditchburn stopped in the pits
after two laps, while Bak er blasted past
Roberts along the start/finish straight .
Kenny hung on, but it was going to be
hard work..
, Baker pulled further and further
away, and Roberts then came under
pressure from Michel Rougerie, who/had
held off a challenge from Gi acomo
Agostini.
After seven laps Baker was I S sec onds
ahead o f Rougerie, wh o h ad outsted
Roberts from second. Agostini .wa s in
trouble , and dropping down the field.
Barry Sheene, ninth on the opening lap ,
was up to fourth .
On the 13th lap Kenny Roberts'
Yamaha seized and pitched the young
American off at nearly 70 mph. Roberts
suffered a sp rain ed ankle . .
Baker rolled on like an express train,
and the interest lay in who would be
second, third and fourth . Ago had
stopped and rejoined the battle a lap
later, but he was well out of tin:
running, and the bike was off song. He
retired shortly thereafter,
Sheene was the first of leaders to pit
for fuel, and the few.seconds cost him
his fourth place. He dropped to ninth
and a lap later American Pat Hennen,
riding a steady race, stopped for "fu el ,
also.
Yo ung Swiss ace Phi llipe Coulon had
moved t hrough to third, but he overdid
it and crashed, letting Victor Palamo,
the Spaniard, m ove into the top three.
Swiss Bruno Kne ubuh ler, Barry Shcene,
and ,J apan ese ace Takazumi Katayama
trailed behind him.
Bruno was next for fuel and he
dropped to sixth, With Palamo and
Katayama also refueling the leaderboard
began to switch. But nothing slowed
Baker. He was more than 30 seconds up
when he stopped, and the second place
man Rougerie wasn't even in sight when
he re-staredl
With six laps to go Baker was a
minute clear, with Sheene now second
after pressing on, Rougerie third and
Kneubuhler fourth . Un lucky Palamo
had broken a water pipe in his pit stop,
and that coupled with a decidedly rough
rear tire forced him to circulate slowly,
losing place after place. Rougerie
overtoo k Sheene, and th e pair had a
real battle for supremacy.
Baker's engine seized three laps from
the finish, bu t freed again immediately.
Easing off the p ressure he rode home a
comfortable winner. Ro ugerie held off
Sheene's last , lap challenge, with
Kne ubuhler fourth, Pat Hennen ni p ping
past Katayama on the las t lap fifth , the
JapaneSe ace sixth, and Scotsman Alex
George on t he He rmatite Ya maha
seve nth.
An incredible di sp u te b etween the
co urse co mmentator and Gi aco m o
Agostini ended wi th Ago grab bin g th e
m ic ropho ne fr om the m an . In a very
emotional state Ago told the crowd that ·
. as much as he wante d t o ride in the
second leg, he could not because h e had
give n all h is spare pistons t o Steve
Baker. The incident, and a general
rel uctance by the other riders to co me
to the grid gave Baker enough time to
rebuild his engine fo r the second race.
Only 27 starters out of the original
40 came to the start of the warming up
.-
s-.
. 0..
<
Steve Baker - he may look like a college kid in repose. but
he blew off a lot of Europe's best in both 100 mile heats.
lap, and one of those, Dutchman Boet
Van Dulman had the engine lock up
before completing that circuit! Cecotto
was there, b ut Roberts with a painful
ankle was not, nor was Ago . But the
South American youngster had no
be tter luck in t his race. On the second
lap his engine seized.
Baker was unbeatable again, but this
time he was content to nurse his engine
along. He maintained a few seconds lead
over Rougerie and Sheene, who were
again battling it out. When t hey got too
close, he simply opened the throttle and
p ulled away!
John Newbold, not impressive in the
first race, had found a new lease on life
in the second. On the first lap he had
been second to Rougerie past the pits,
but even after Baker and Roberts had
gone through, the young English rider
was always about the place.
. Palamo's bad luck continued. A
petrol pipe burst and he Crashed at the
chicane, fortunately without injury, but
that was a very tame fall compared with
Scotsman Alex George , who had his 700
Yamaha gearbox, seize. Alex c1
_aims it
was the "best" of the meeting, and his
worst injury was a badly grazed elbow
which took three m illimet ers off t he
bone, when he leve red h im self from
u nd er t he sliding bi ke ,t o sit o n 'to p of it!
Baker, out front, had a much easier
time. Rougerie was not likely to catch
hi m , and in d eed Sheene went into
second spo t when th e French man
stopped fo r fuel. Baker's le ad 'was n ow
38 seconds, and in te re st lay in whether
Ro ugerie could reclaim second pl ace. Ire
did, · t ho ugh fo r a fe w laps it loo ked as
tho ug h Katayama wo uld ca tch the pair
o f them . But he slowe d and that was
that.
_ , .
Results
1. S. Bak er (Yaml. · 2. M. Rou ger ie (Y am) . 3.
B. Sl"leene (Suz). 4. T. Katayama (Yam) . S. P.
Hennen (Suz). 6 . J. Newbold (S uz l . 7. V .
Duhamel (Kaw). 8. G. Chorkr~un ( Yam ) . 9 .
R. Rulz (Yam) . 1 0 . J. Fin dlay (Yam ). 11. M.
An ko ne (Suzl . 12 . A. ScJaresa (Yam ). 13. V.
Pal o m o (Ya m). 14. P. K orh onen (Vam). 15.
C. Bou rgeois (Vam) . 1 6 . G. H usso n ( Va m ) .
1 7. B . Kneu buh l er (Vam ). 1 8. R. Ha slam
( Yam );
AUSTRIAN 125 GP MX
Rahier &ChUrHVV'
score moto wins
CORINTHIA, AUSTRIA, APRIL 4
World Champion Gaston Rahier
had to settle for a tie in the 125cc
Gran d P r i x point standings
following the season's opening
round.in southern Austria. Czech
Jiri Ch uravy , aboard a CZ, took
the win in the opening moto over

