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/126417
Flying Freddie Spencer will enter
both the Expert 250cc and the
Superbike events and should be a
shoo·in in the 250cc race. Why
Spencer is eligible to. ~de a 1C?OOcc
Superbilte and not eltgJble to nde a
750 in the National class may be a
mystery to some. It's the way the rules
were set up many years ago and never
changed.
Alan Collins from San Jose should
bag the Novice class te;' ~dd to ~ ne~r
win at Daytona and hiS unpressJve ~tn
at Laconia. He may be the top NOVlce
road racer in the nation by season end
but also the oldest to take the Novice
title in years.
No 16-year-old fuzzy-cheeked kid,
this one. Collins is 23 and the guy he
beat out for the win at Laconia was an
ancient 291 When is the last time the
combined ages of the top two in any
National meeting was 52? That's dam
near two Springsteens and one
Spencer.
Yamaha will strike one way or
another in all but the Superbike class
where it is wide open for Kawasaki,
Ducati, Suzuki or BMW. Ron Pierce
and Wes Cooley will be tough to beat,
but it is possible.
Robens is rated as the best road
racer in the world at this time. He has
to be the pre-race favorite. no matt~r
how small the engine. But If ever SkIp
Aksland had a chance to finally break
out of all that early-year publicity stuff
of being the pupil, stud~nt, etc., the
time would be at Sears Pomt.
Skip was really the only smooth and
fast rider at Laconia. He had over a
20-second lead when the race came to
a stop. It was a display of mercy
because the margin would have been
twice that had it gone the original
distance.
The young man from Manteca may
or may not have tossed away the
Grand National title last year at Sears
when he bailed while leading in the
first few laps of the race.
Now he has a chance to make
people forget that and all he has to do
is: (1) win the race; (2) beat Kenny
Roberts; (3) stay on the wheels all the
way. Is that really too much to ask Qf
what some consider to be the second
best road racer to call the U.S. home?
A win at Sears would also put
Aksland back into a position for an
outside/darkhorse shot at the Grand
National title this year. Robens does
not need the points like he did two
yean ago.
Next column we will talk about the
July 21 National TT at Ascot and a
couple of guys by the name of
Springsteen and Eklund.
•
With all the talk about going to
some type of 500cc rule, perhaps
as soon as next season, riders
and fans get their first look on
July 15 at what a 500cc can do against
tm, 750's - in road racing.
The event is the Sears Point
Raceway AMA Grand Natio~al
Championship/Winston Pr? Series
round just nonh of San FrancISCo Bay.
The 500cc is the factory job of Kenny
Roberts with "King Kenny" in his only
1979 AMA appearance.
Yamaha Motor Co. and the
Yamaha dealers of northern
California are backing this event
which is the only National road race in
the west this year.
Kenny committed to the race many
months ago and also flatly stated that
he would ride a 500cc instead of a
750cc.
Sears Point will be unique 'in other
ways as well. First of all it will be a one
day race event. Saturday will find
practice all day and all of the actual
competition goes on Sunday.
Some fans, and riders, for that
matter, have been asking for this type
of schedule for a few years. 250cc
Expert, 250cc Novice, Su~erb~ke
Production and the Expert bIg bIke
National - all in one day.
The last time Roberts raced at Sears
he started last in the final due to some
minor problems earlier in the day.
Within a short amount of time, and
laps (four), he was out in front and
eventually won the race - on a 750cc.
Last year Kenny went to Europe and
won the FIM 500cc title. This year he
spotted the spons from other lands
a race or two and then took off and is
once again leading the FIM 500cc
standings and has also won the most
races over there.
His YZR500 will be about 80 pounds
lighter than the 750cc Yamahas which
mayor may not be to his advantage.
Sears' has been around for awhile and
has its share of bumps which could
make it smoother riding for the
heavier 750s.
Daytona winner Dal~ Si~gleton w!1I
be 'there as will Lacoma wtnner, Skip
Aksland. Gene Romero, winner of two
events in England last spring, will also
be entered.
Missing will be the Kawa~ki Kid,
Mike Baldwin, who came up with a leg
fracture at LacOllia. Mike took a flyer
that found him on the side of the track
and his mean green machine
submerged in the pond. (Totally.)
The
fast,
Daytona·winning
Yoshimura Super Suzukis will ~ tm,re
but so will the potent Ducaus that
have won at Sean before and also won
at Laconia in p\i~June.
• ••
j
.
, l;Ioxy Rockwood
,
UD flGh'.t. A LOSING gnu
There isn't a dirt rider wjho likes changing tires.
It's a hassle. Metzelers, Yokdtiamas, Goodyears, DUA lops, they're
all tough, That's why I'll never forget the day I found Lubri·Tech
Tire Mounting Lubricant.
DON'TP8KII
"1'V8I
I spray plenty of Lubri-Tech Tire Mounti~g Lube
on the tire beads and that knobby slIps
onto the rim without damaging the tube or the
tire. And when you're racing - punishing
those tires - the tire lubricant
stops tube pinching along the rim.
hOLD
"n.... DOWN
I found another reason why Lubri-Tech Tire Mounting Lubricant
belongs in a dirt rider's von. It sets up a seal between the tire and the
rim greatly reducing slippage of the lire on the rim. So I race .
at lower tire pressures. Any way you look at .t, lire performance IS
important to dirt racing. And tire core is a key step ,n th~
Lubri·Tech race prep. I follow the 12 step prep and then I know I m ready
for the weekend - from the rubber on up.
5EIlIOU5 NO. 1
T-"'.5end$5
.....IzeS,M,L
or XL s.iaus
No.1
cap,_
adiust_l. size, $5.
Lubri-Tech Pra "lets,
1251 N.K~Rd.
~ , III.
Always follow tho ,ec....mendot.... of molofcyclo and equipment manu/ad\lto,..
Always ute lub<;·Toch lubricanb and porlonnonco chom~ as ...,.......ndod.
lub<~Toch P