Cycle News

Cycle News 2021 Issue 07 February 17

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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CN III ARCHIVES BY SCOTT ROUSSEAU F ormer Six Days hero Carl Cranke says he can't recall ever riding an AMA National Enduro. "When I started out, I started riding short track," Cranke said. "I liked to go fast. Enduros, hav- ing to keep time, just didn't do it for me, whereas in Six Days you could just ride your pace and always be on time or early. You never had to look at the clock. I wasn't a timekeeper. Truthfully, I never even had a wristwatch!" Cranke started riding amateur flat track in Northern California when he was 16 years old. "My first race was at a little place called Three Star Raceway near Sacramento, and I loved it," Cranke said. "I loved short track. I lived in Orangevale, and Dan Haaby lived there. Some of the top Northern California guys were like Bugs [Dick Mann] and Mert [Lawwill]. That was my time. I rode short track and scrambles, and then when I turned 18, I P104 CARLE CRANKE: THE PURIST that and didn't have the interest in pursuing it. So, I bought a little 73cc Hercules and started riding desert races, and anything and everything." That included motocross, which was developing into a big sport in America in 1972. "I rode CZs mostly," Cranke said. "I raced against Brad Lackey. Brad had a brother named Randy, who was fast, and there was another guy, Bob Grossi. Northern California was very competitive." An opportunity to ride a two- day trial then changed his life forever. started riding Class C stuff." If Cranke had stayed with flat track, then his might be another name made legendary in Bruce Brown's iconic film, On Any Sunday. Instead, Cranke chose a different path, ultimately one that was more single tracked of purpose. "I was high-point novice short tracker in the nation in 1968, but what happened was that in 1969 I had to make a decision, because to move up we had to switch from [two-stroke] 250cc to 500cc [four-stroke] bikes," Cranke says. "I was doing all my own engines at the time, and I couldn't afford During the 1970s, Carl Cranke collected seven ISDE gold medals.

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