Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1990's

Cycle News 1994 01 12

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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The racing HaydenBrothers s you cross the large truss bridge over the Ohio River from Indiana to Owensboro a sign r ead s " Welco me to the Blu e Grass State of Ken tucky." On this drab, rainy day in the Ohio Valley, I imagined that someday the greeting sign might read, "Welcome to Kentucky, the home of the Hayden Bro th ers - Motorcycle World Champions." Owensboro, a city of 53,000, is located on the southern ba n k of the Ohio River in weste rn Kentucky. Racin g runs deep in the blood of the people in the r egion. From horse racing to stock cars, from motocross to dirt track. The most popular rac ing famil y to com e out of O wensboro is the Waltrips of NASCAR fame. On the ou tskirts of Owensboro is the Hayden farm, home of 16year -old Tommy and 14-year-old Nick Hayden, two road racers with very bright futures in the sport. The Ha Y: den sp read is typica l of the numerous picturesque horse farms for which Kentucky is famous. The first tip -off tha t the Hayden's farm is the home of a family of motorcycle racers is the street sign leading into the driveway that reads: Yamaha Drive . Once on the property, which is bordered by a wooden fence and trees, you see the practice track next to the house. The configura- Earl says. " We don't push them into d oing things they don't want to do. If anything, it's the kids pushing me to get them to more races." The Hayden famil y se e m s welladjusted and certainly appear s to have their children's best int eres ts in mind, sacrificing financially to help realize the kids' dreams. The house in which the Hay den's live is a farm house, built some 100 years ago, but you'd never know by looking at it. The place is totally modernized inside and out. The first thing that catches your eye when you walk into the family room is the hundreds of trophies on the second-floor indoor balcony - most of them are taller than the kids who won them. we 're off to Owensboro Catholic High . School wher e Tommy attends, to get some photos. "Lately the school has been very good about giving Tommy time off for rac ing," says Earl, who is an alumni of the schoo\. "At first they were a little hesitant about it, but now I think they realize that this could be a career for him. As long as he keeps up his grades, he can take as much time off from school as he needs." We arrive just as Tommy's speech class is about to begin. Many of the kids recognize Earl as we walk through the halls. "Hi, Mr. Hayden," they say, as we walk by. Once in the classroom, Earl introduces 'me to to Tom my' s speech class teacher, Ms. Mak. Ms . Mak opens the class by taking a p rayer request. One girl asks to pray that the rain stops so the football game can be p layed. "It's already been ca ncelled," says a young man wearing a football jersey. After the class prays, Ms. Mak introduces Earl and myself. i explain why I'm there and tell them not to worry about tion of the track changes every so often to give the kids a new type of tum to master. Th e fact that To mmy and Nick are making a nam e for themselves in racing at such a youn g age is really no surprise. Their father , Earl Hayden, rac ed d irt track in the '60's and ear ly '70's in the rough and tumbl e da ys when 200 riders would be trying to qualify for the main. Even the kids ' mom , Rose, raced in what . they used to call the "Powder-Puff" class for women racers. All five of the Hayden kids, Tommy and Nick, along with Roger Lee, Jenny and Kathleen have known nothing but racing. Tommy should probably be in the Guinness Book of World Records for being perhaps the worlds youngest motorcycle racer at the age of two. Earl greet s me as I pull up to the ho use. We spend some time talking as he shows me around the place. There are not many sports where teenagers can mak e an impact on a professional leveL But in sports like tennis, For 14-year-

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