Cycle News

Cycle News 2023 Issue 05 February 7

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 ISSUE FEBRUARY , P97 mainly because the race was not even 10 years old yet. But those who did know about it knew it was something extraordinary (and dangerous), and Stearns knew he wanted to do it. But how? It's not like you just load up your van, drive to France, and sign up to race the Paris to Dakar Rally. "Somehow he got hooked up with Yamaha France and [top Dakar racer] Jean Claude Olivier," says Harden. "He was hired to ride as Jean Claude's and [Ya - maha teammate] Franco Picco's water boy at the 1985 Paris to Dakar. Fortunately for Chuck, Jean Claude and Franco had an uneventful ride finishing second and third overall behind Gaston Rahier, and Chuck was able to follow them across the line in sixth overall, winning several stages along the way." Stearns rode a modified Ya - maha TT600 in the 22-day race. "Back then no one except a small handful of us even heard about Dakar," says Harden. "I knew it was a pretty big deal and was happy for him." So was Cycle News. My as - signment was to track Stearns down and interview him about his experiences in the race. I re- member he was happy to oblige, excited about his accomplish- ment, and had plans to go back to Europe for more races. In my interview, I let Stearns do all the talking. "The rally itself started right at the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France," he said in the interview. "[We] headed down paved roads to the Mediterranean—about 684 miles. It was a long haul. Then we loaded up our bikes on a boat and headed to Algeria, where we all spent the night in a hotel." It didn't take long for Stearns to catch on to this new-to-him rally stuff. He won the third stage. His desert-racing experi - ence paid off here. "The third special test section was 325 miles through very, very fast desert—I won it by half an hour," he said. Later in the interview, he talked about the scariest part of the rally. "The most difficult sec - tion of the rally was through the Mietia Desert—there has never been a road cut through there, and that was scary. Everybody got together and rode through there together, but I went by myself because I wanted to make up time—it was kind of like crossing hell. It was rocky, absolutely no vegetation, and it reminded me of Death Valley [in California]. There were parts where the sand dunes were so soft it would bury my bike up to the engine cases and cover the front disc brake. "This was the day I had the most problems, I would hit sand dunes that would swallow my bike five, six or seven times in one day. I would have to get off Stearns, aboard a Yamaha TT600, finished sixth in the Paris to Dakar rally in 1985. PIONEER

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