Cycle News

Cycle News 2021 Issue 23 June 8

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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VOLUME 58 ISSUE 23 JUNE 8, 2021 P133 nowadays. This is thanks in large part to better crash helmets and clothing, rider airbags and back protectors, and also to better medical intervention. More than any other factor, it is thanks to safer tracks—the worst of them simply aban- doned, others subject to en- forced modifications such as revised layouts, improved run- off, air-fences and more. At first in response to rider pressure and recently thanks to the rigour of Dorna. It is noteworthy how the World Championship death toll fell sharply after the Isle of Man TT was taken off the calendar in 1976. This was followed, gradually, by other notoriously dangerous circuits, like Spa Francorchamps and Austria's super-scary Salzburgring. A run through Wikipedia's epitaph of 104 names of grand prix victims (including sidecar drivers and passengers) is most revealing. In the first decade, from 1949 to 1958, there were 31 deaths. The next decade, 25, from 1969 to 1978 27. An aver- age of almost three riders lost every year. Thereafter, only 13 between 1979 and 1988, and since then just a smattering. The next three decades together recorded seven deaths, and now in 2021 one more. No wonder what was once regarded as a normal hazard now occasions such a shock. Brutal notification of the serious dangers of motorcycle racing comes so seldom that it is easy to forget and make light of it in the interim. When the victim is still in his teens, when any parent can feel the agony even at second hand, the shock is all the more se- vere. And likewise, to his peers and his on-track rivals. The "it couldn't happen to me" feeling nullified at a stroke. Then comes the why-oh-why. The feeling that somehow these daredevils should be protected from themselves, that if the teen- age brain has not yet developed risk-averse strategies, then adults should step in to take responsibility. This tempting argument, however, doesn't hold water. These Moto3 kids are much bet- ter off engaged in professional motorcycle racing, fully super- vised and with first-class medical attendance on first-class tracks than they would be out taking freelance risks, tomb-stoning, after-dark parkour, base-jump- ing, etc. There was inevitably a lot of posturing on the dark day that Dupasquier's fate was confirmed as racing got under way on Sunday. A lot of dedications of rostrum finishes and post-race pointing at the sky, probably comforting and definitely sin- cere. The tributes continued the following weekend at Catalunya. As often, it was Miguel Oliveira whose heartfelt but matter-of-fact comment summed it up best. "I wish this sport could not be so cruel...but it is our passion." CN "These Moto3 kids are much better off engaged in professional motorcycle racing, fully supervised and with first-class medical attendance on first-class tracks than they would be out taking freelance risks, tomb-stoning, after- dark parkour, base-jumping, etc." "It is remarkable, however, to measure just how much safer World Championship racing is nowadays."

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