Cycle News

Cycle News 2022 Issue 40 October 4

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/1480848

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T he year is 1998. Yamaha launches the first edition of the YZF-R1. The world's press is gob smacked, and the company can't keep up with demand. Waiting lists blow out to six months for salivating custom- ers—and Yamaha's rivals have been caught with their pants down. The 1998 Yamaha YZF-R1 is the granddaddy of the modern Superbike. Until its release (and for some time after it), Super- bikes were classified as 750cc four-cylinder machines and 1000cc twins. World Superbike would keep these rules until the end of 2002, but in reality, the world had moved on in 1998. The R1 saw to that. The R1 also saw the death of the '90s liter-class hyperbike (an over-exaggerated term common at the time for any- thing bigger than a Superbike), which arguably began when Teo Baba released the mighty 1992 Honda CBR900RR Fireblade. Sport bikes at the time were primarily designed as road bikes, not racers with lights. The R1 was the first to take this way of thinking and junk it. Comfort was reduced to the bare minimum in the name of pure speed. Even things like a handy trunk under CN III ARCHIVES P116 STORY BY RENNIE SCAYSBROOK 25 Compared to anything else in 1998, the Yamaha YZF-R1 was light years ahead. PHOTOS: YAMAHA YEARS OF THE YAMAHA YZF-R1

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