Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1970's

Cycle News 1979 01 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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...----What if Chairman Mao had had an S&W Engineering Handbook? No. it's not RED. but it will be READ , by everyone. o For your copy. including specificatio n and master applicationchart.send check or moneyorderfor$5 ,95 ($4,95+$1,OOfor postage and handling)to: . . 2617 Woodland Drive _ ,. ,_" Anaheim, California 92801 C.t lifor nid re..idf." nh add &"" ..Idle ld l . "Uow 6 Wf>l'k.. for per ..o ne! ch eck .. 10 cl f' .H. l lli 8 'CHOPPA•• SEVENTEEN INCH ' SIKE SOOT A battle of the multi-time Gra nd ~ationa l Cha m pions. Four-time winner Carroll Reswe ber 111 leads th ree-timer Bart M II ._. . I _ .= ...... "!'be Mean_t Boot O n "!'be B l ock . .. ~1.utIlIIrlllll'lft,l7 ......, rnm.it l...tIIt, ...... , • Oil ,..... ..... .... • co.tpur • tnt 7\ ~ . . . Dl .... Iftftu , tM\ .. • StIcMI'-I. . , . _ ... ItHl ... ., ",.tt _h c.atnctJa • . . . dlt", lutllIr .... ....... ~, ..... cnetM~ mt. tIl1I Over 250 St yles of Boots and Work Sho es 'Won Shoes Unlimited , _,II227W-"inglonBIvd.~ GMIon GnMI, 12llBl111roo1etter promoters and final.ly the really big dollar sponsors wh~ ~11I want to drop a couple of million doll~rs t a t leas!> o~ A~A Grand National Championship ra cing. At the oppo~ite end of the spect.ru~, another myth IS. that Class C racln~ IS dead and/or dying fas t. Class C racing is not dying (if it wer e . a largc !=ompany like ~ . 1- Reynolds - bless them and thank you - would not be involved) though it is top heavy. The grass roots system is not as strong as it was in the past; but there were 783 Novices , 49:' Juniors and 266 Expert professional licenses for a total of 1541 issued in 1978 . and 243 ra ce meetings were sanctioned and run under AMA rules . By way of compa rison the re were 131 Expert and 700 No vice Pro motocross licenses issu ed by the AMA in 1978 . Motocross racing, particularly Supercross has received a large amount of publicity the past two or three years. Supercross th erefore 'claims much of the glamor and prestige that used to , be accorded the Grand National! . Camel Pro Series. which has accelerated the myth that Class C is dying. I Class C actually is in a sort of a holding pattern . There has been no real growth for severa l yea rs now . Many of t he people involved with Class C are complacent about the level the competition ha s achieved an? feel .for a number of reasons that this pomon of the sport ca n't really get any bigger or better. No one really wants to disturb the status quo in a .very positive manner for fear of possible loss, or perhaps from lack of incentive or something as unimportant and rnundane as the lack of time andenergy to do so when the y hav e their hands full coping with , th e day to day problems and just "m ai n ta ining" what we ha ve. No sport. however . can remain in a holding pattern indefinitely. . That is why I ask those with influence and control , the promoters. th e top people at the sanctioning body and the motorcycle manufacturers to take a good hard look at th e overall p icture of Class C raci ng with the thought of how to best improve th e sport, to make it better, to make it bigger. Motorcycling in this cou nt ry is a sport . It always has been and it always will be , The sport of motorcycling needs to use all types of racing to generate more membership in the AMA and as a tool to increase th e sales of motorcycles. Racing is still a very va lid tool . as I feel Yamaha ha s proven over the past couple of yea rs. The value of the spirir 'of being involved (in whatever way) with a winner is valid and quite powerful. Those who per· haps doubt the truth of the above statements should th ink about HarleyDa vidson Motor Company for a few minutes. Class C is cert a in ly much more professional now than it was in the beginning when it was created as a broad production -based type of competition calculated to draw lots of participants and make more !I1oney for the sanctioning body so that the AMA could grow. The more powerful and influential the AMA got , the better the job they could do for motorcyclists and motorcycling in this country where motorcycling has never enjoyed the same type and amount of respect it enjoys around the rest of the world . T he level of professionalism in Class C ra cing stayed about the same. grow · ing slowly for the first fony years or so (it was good Amateur Professionalism in many wa ys meaning no disrespect to those participants) until the late sixties. It th en took a sort of quantum jump duri ng the late sixties into the early seventies, but has really leveled off since then and maybe even slid backwa rds JUSt a bi t. Some people feel that Class C is a dinosaur which has had its heyday and is now just sort of hanging around for a while as good ent ert a in ment for some (with the exception of a few of the b iggest races . of course) , We need a healthy shot of positive thinking about Class C , and perhaps .one of the best ways to do this is to in crease the level of professionalism at the top with th e idea of providing a bigger incentive for rid ers, promoters. manufacturers and sponsors. So many of th e thoughts and con cepts that worked when Class C racing was crea ted and was indeed a broad production motorcycle-based beginning professional sport no longer work well given th e highly spe cialized. nonproduction racing machine based , mor e professional sport it has become. For insta nce. t he cla im ing rule wh ich worked well and made sense for

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