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/127760
INTERVIEW World Superbike Champion Carl. Fogarty
A World Champion and his toys.
because him and his bike were better
than anybody else. Since then it's got a
lot bigger and there's a lot more factory
teams involved. I remember riding
against Doug in '91, when I was on the
Honda. It was just ridiculous. His bike
must have been 15 mph faster. It was
just crazy. He was a good rider, but he
certainly had it a lot easier than it is
now. All the manufacturers are in it
now, whereas back then it was just
Ducati.
Is it an advantage for you to know
exactly how the Ducati works now that
you're going to be on a Honda? Knowing when the Ducati riders have to
accelerate out of a comer, say_.
No because I'll just get on the bike and if
I've got a problem going into a corner
I've just got to try and solve it, whether
the other bikes are better or worse. You
just know from being a rider that you
should be better in this ~ction or that
section of a track.
Has your domination of World Superbike racing made young English riders
concentrate on superbikes rather than
GPs?
That's the way it seems to be happening.
Nowadays, it depends upon which country you come from as to which championship you think is the biggest. In England, it's superbikes. It's big in America
as well. In Australia, because you've got
Doohan and Beattie in GPs, superbikes is
not quite as big. In the rest of Europe,
like France and Italy, GPs are still the
main class, even though superbikes are
obviously quite big in Italy because of
DucaIL It just depends on the country.
Do you think there are some young
English riders ready to explode on the
international scene?
Yeah, there are now. I think what I've
done in the last couple of years has
turned people round a little and they're
starting to look over here more. You've
got riders like Neil Hodgson who's
going good and has now got a ride with
Ducati. That might not have happened a
couple of years ago.
There's Jamie Robinson; Chris Walker, Darren Barton on the 125, whom]
think is going to win a GP next year for
sure, he's that good. It's all happening
now and the funny thing is, Neil Hodgson lives 10 miles away from here, Darren Barton lives five miles away from
here, and we all used to go to the same
motocross club. So it's this area, the
northern area. We don't take no shit up
here (laughs).
But you are well-known in this area,
aren't you?
Fame is a funny sort of thing for this
part. of England. It's a fairly tough old
place to come from. Because of who I
am, I might be pampered in other areas,
but here I'm just the guy who races
bikes and does well at it. You don't get
treated special and I don't expect to be..
But you wouldn't go and live somewhere else?
I've never thought about it. I've always
been a home person and I think it would
be too much for me to move way from
my family and friends. If I'd been to
another country which I thought was
better then I might have considered it.
But I've never come across a country
that] thought was better than England.
Do you reckon Hodgson will do well
on the Ducati?
Maybe not straight away. But he's got
the right attitude for the job. He wants
to win, that's it. That's all that matters to
him. Eventually he'll get it right. It
might be sooner, it might be later. But I
think Ducati have made a good decision
by signing him.
Will you be available to give him
advice if he needs it?
No, not now! (laughs)
All the psychological stuff that you
tend to do when you're racing, like
being overtly critical of your opponents, is that something that comes
naturalIy to you or is it forced?
I think a bit of both. It is something that
comes natural. I don't know, I sort of
like to annoy people and wind them up
before a race.
Is it something you've found to be
effective in helping you to win?
I don't know. I think with guys like
Scott Russell, they don't care. He says
things about me and I don't care. I think
we just do it for the press really; it looks
good for people watching it on TV. But
to be honest] don't think it bothers any
of us what anyone says.
It's just part of the show?
A little bit.
What do you enjoy doing when you're
not actually racing?
] enjoy getting home. Going out for a
drink with my mates and going out for a
meal with the missus. Just relaxing.
Do you spend a lot of time in pubs?
Not a lot of time. Probably once a week
on average. I'm not a big drinker, only a
few beers, that's about it. I'm usually on
my back after four anyway (laughs).
What sport do you enjoy?
Football. I watch and play quite a bit of
football. I like motocross. I play squash.
Have you ever felt the fans turning
against you, like your football (sOccer)
hero Eric Cantona?
Motorcycle racing's not like that. There
was something at the beginning of the
year about what I was supposed to have
said about Americans, which wasn't
exactly true. The way it came out was
that I hate all Americans. But what I'd
actually said was that I hated the way
the Americans run the Daytona 200. So
that limited that to about six or seven
people in the entire nation. When I went
over there, there were a few flags and
that flying around, but it was nothing. It
just.made me laugh, really; it didn't
bother at all. On the slowing-down lap
after the race I might have given them a
finger or something like that, but nothing special. But of all the places I've
been, apart from Italy and England, I
seem to have the most fans in America.
You're not going back to Daytona this
year?
No, it's. a race that doesn't mean anything to me. I think it's just a lot of hype
and it's just something for the Americans. For me or anyone else to win it is
nearly impossible. You've got to have so
much luck on your side and the right
pace car coming out at the right time.
The race is a nightmare. It's badly run.
Even qualifying's crazy. But the biggest
thing is that it's just dangerous. Very
dangerous. You're going round the
banking at about 180 mph and there's a
concrete wall two inches away from
you. I saw that last year and I thought,
"That's just not for me." If there's a big
accident I wouldn't want to be partof it.
Some people have linked Yasutomo
Nagai's death to the Ducati being too
unreliable. What do you think of that?
That's just crazy. Any bike can blow up
at any time. It's just a freak accident. For
anyone to blame it on Ducati is just
ridiculous.
Is that something you think about, that
aspect of racing?
No, you don't think about it. I think
when you beg"in to think about it, that's
the time to stop.
fN
~~~ 've always lived in and around Blackbwn. I went to schoo1 here. I was
completely useless at school. I took no exams. I hated every day I was
there. I just looked out the window, thinking about getting home and getting on my bike. As far as I can remember, I always wanted to ride a bike. My dad
used to race so 1 was always going to races with him. He was a pretty good racer.
He did well at the road racing circuits like the IT and Ire\and.
"I started racing n:lOtorcross when I was 14. I switched to road racing when I was
17, in 1983. My first road race was in August of that year, on my dad's Formula 2
Ducati600.
"My first real season of racing was 1984. I was second in my first race and I won
my second race. But when I started to go really good on the international scene, I
got injured. I finished llth in the 1986 British GP and I broke m leg the week after.
So that ended 1986 and I struggled to get back to 6tness:;h 1987. Then I broke
my leg again So I went through two difficult years, at a time when I might have got
into Grands Prix.
"I won the Formula One World Championship in 1988. The following year,
Honda helped me out and I won the F-1 again and the IT for the first time. In 1990 I
wanted to go .intO World Superbike because I thought that would be the way into
GPs. 1 signed with Honda in 1990, but they wanted me to stay another year in F-l
and win that again So I did. I also woo the IT again and a lot of races in Britain. In
1991 I went into World Superbike, but by then the RC30 was way past it. But I
proved that 1 was capable of going good by beating Fred Merkel. I was seventh in
the championship and he was eighth.
"At the end of 1991, I spent all the money r d made in the previous years, bought
a Ducati and a truck and -m World Superbike racing. I also signed for Kawasaki
France for endurance and rode for Yamaha at the IT. I just rode for everybody that I
could that year. It was the I