Cycle News - Archive Issues - 2000's

Cycle News 2005 09 28

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/128397

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 27 of 79

-tion trim MV Agusta's F4 Su~rbike m~~ : ; 'i:a,~~'fir':n's re-entry info big-league racing - had t happen sooner or later , the question was never if, but wen. When what? When MY Agusta would go racing again officially for the first time since the day the music died in October 1976, where, with the final race at Brands Hatch of the legendary works Italian four-cylinder GP bikes, the red-andsilver, open-megaphone "fire engines" were banished from the racetrack by cruel new noise regulations. 28 It had to happen because racing is an even greater element of MY Agusta's intrinsic appeal to potential customers than it is for Ducati. What else could you expect from the Ferrari of motorcycles, winners of 275 GPs and 75 World Championship titles between 1950 and 1976, and victorious in a stunning 3,028 international races during that quarter-century of racing supremacy on the world stage? Because with its future now secure as a member of the Malaysian car-making Proton conglomerate, it's now time for the historic Italian trophy marque's management - still headed by racing nutcase but now minority owner Claudio Castiglioni, whose Cagiva SEPTEMBER 28, 2005 • CYCLE NEWS factory was the only European marque in the modern era to successfully challenge the might of japan Inc. in SOOcc GP racing, before morphing into today's MY Agusta company - to make plans for a comeback to the tracks in 2006 in the World Superbike Championship. In preparation for that, the MY Agusta R&D men - headed by john Kocinski's former Cagiva 500" GP race engineer Andrea Goggi, today the youthful head of MY Agusta's F4 engine development - have been building factory development motors to be raced in the Italian Superbike series this season by a team owned by another illustrious name from GP racing's history books: Roberto Gallina. Today a Yamaha, MY Agusta - and Ducati! - main dealer in his home town of La Spezia, Italy's naval headquarters on the Ugurian coast, Gallina is best known as a leading GP racer more than 30 years ago, who then as team owner earned back-to-back SOOcc World titles for Suzuki with Marco Lucchinelli and Franco Uncini before sWitching to Honda to run an NSRSOO for a certain Pierfrancesco Chili. (Indeed, Frankie won his only SOOcc GP victory on a Gallina Honda, before eventually switching to World Superbike.) Once retired from the GP arena, Roberto turned his talents to four-cylinder four-strokes, developing the Hayashi 750 by Gallina four-cylinder Superbike for a japanese customer, of which a dozen ended up being built.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Archive Issues - 2000's - Cycle News 2005 09 28