Cycle News

Cycle News 2021 Issue 34 August 24

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 34 AUGUST 24, 2021 P117 run. A total of 89 riders started from Columbus, Ohio, on the final leg of the run at six in the morn- ing. A parade downtown greeted the car carrying FAM officials, which included Oscar Hedstrom, co-founder of Indian Motorcycles. Joseph De Salvo of Chicago and John McCarver of Indianapolis were the first riders to arrive, coming in at 5:24 p.m., nearly 12 hours after they'd left Columbus. That 200-mile trip today on I-70 takes about three hours. What FAM officials learned upon their arrival in Indianapolis was not good. Several riders had arrived days earlier by train and gone to the track to make test runs. In hopes of still getting a good crowd and possibly by way of pressure from the track officials, the riders issued rosy assess- ments to the press, but privately they were telling the FAM the bad news: The Speedway's racing surface was loose, deep and eas- ily rutted. It was so bad that tires were coming off the rims under the pounding of the mile-a-minute speed. Respected riders Stanley Kellogg and Walter Goerke tested at the Speedway and told FAM race chairman Herbert Githens that the track was far from ready to host a race, especially one of National Championship caliber. Tensions were high. Much was riding on this race. It was the much-anticipated debut of the track, the largest ever built in America. Behind schedule and over budget, the investors in the track, headed by Indianapolis industrialist Carl Fisher (who later developed Miami Beach), were depending on a dazzling opening. Fisher issued a strangely worded and somewhat arrogant statement to the press after newspapers reported the riders' apprehension: "The Speedway will positively be in finished condi- tion and ready for record time. The track is better now than the Brooklands ever was. We have double the force of men working day and night, smoothing out the few remaining defects, and there is no reason why records can- not be broken. The races on the track tomorrow will demonstrate the truth of this assertion, as the practices have already done." Instead of the hoped-for grand opening, riders were talking strike. Githens told the riders in no uncertain terms that too much was riding on this event and that any rider who did not compete would be suspended from the FAM for 60 days. Now keep in mind that these were the best riders of the era: Motorcycle Race

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