Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1990's

Cycle News 1994 04 27

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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',,:' .. Back to the future? Speedway Rules (Left) Here is an example of what the Unlimited Speedway Association would like to see on the track In 1994. This Jawa model 898, owned by Russell Racing, features all of the current speedway technology Including the leading-link fork, laydown engine/lrame combination and 22·lnch rear tire. There are less than five of these motorcycles In the U.S, and they are Inelglble for competition at Costa Mesa Speedway and Auburn Speedway. (Below) Brad OXley's Russell Racing-backed Weslake Is typical of the' current breed of speedway bikes, which have looked the same for over 15 years. Note the 19-1nch rear tire and the upright engine position. OXley has also refrained from switching to the new leading-link front fork assembly that was made legal last season. This Is an AMA-Iegal speedway bike for 1994. By Scott Rousseau y its very nature, speedway racing is probably the simplest form of motorcycle racing. Riders compete on methanol-burning fourstrokes with dry clutches and no brakes. There's really not a lot that can go wrong mechanically, and when something does the problem is obvious. The same goes for the races thernselves j four laps and you're either on your way to the main or onto the trailer - no practice; no second chances. It's the behind-the-scenes of speedway - the struggle between the rule makers, the promoters, and sometimes trying to play both roles that can, at times, make speedway racing as complicated as any form of motorcycle racing. And so it has been tha t the start of the 1994 season - one which many speedway insiders say could make or break the sport in America - has already seen more turns than the racers themselves. Just like the previous five years, 1993 was a difficult year for speedway. Promoters agonized over the dwindling crowds as speedway - once one of the most popular motorsports attractions in Southern California - fell victim to the local economy and B -I:: ~ 28 was forced to compete head-on with the myriad other forms of entertainment for the spectator's hard -earned dollar. Those speedway promoters who started out the year well would later find that they were just trading dollars at the end of the year as slim head counts ate into their first-half profits. The economy has had a trickle-down effect on the riders, too. In the early '80s; a top-level first-division speedway star could feasibly make $5000 racing four nights a week in Southern California. But the recent lack of good crowds has brought about shrinking purses. Riders

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