Cycle News

Cycle News 2023 Issue 24 June 20

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 JUNE , P123 Tammy Jo was the middle of three sisters born to the Kirk fam- ily on May 6, 1962. Her father, Tommy Joe Kirk, was a welder by day, a racer by night and a Bultaco dealer for fun. Operating the dealership right out of the family home in Dalton, Georgia, Tammy and her sisters grew up around motorcycles. "As soon as I could walk," she says "I was on a motorcycle and I would ride from daylight to dark." Racing was an important part of the business for Tommy; in addition to being a competitor himself, he sponsored Grand National dirt track racer Roger Crump for several years. When Tammy was ready to go racing, the entire family got behind the effort. "We spent almost all of our money to go racing," she recalls. "We didn't even buy new furniture for the house—had the same things for 20 years! When my older sister got a job, she put her money into our race effort, even though neither she nor my younger sister even rode a motorcycle!" It didn't take long for Tammy to see that girls who play boys' games would have to fight just to get on the track. "We went to a race in Alabama," she remembers, "and the promoter said, 'sorry, we don't have a Powder Puff class' for her. My dad said, 'well, she's here to race against the boys' and of course, he responded 'well, she can't do that' and that was almost the end of it. "But my dad wouldn't let it go. He said, 'are you afraid of her? That she's going to go out and beat all of these boys?' So, the guy relented and I got to race. "And I did beat all of the boys, too," she adds! It became the game that Tommy and Tammy would have to learn to play, almost every time they would visit a new track. "Dad would have to shame the promoter into letting me race." And, just as she discovered that night at Holiday Downs, boys would ride harder and some - times even out of control, as they tried to beat the fast girl from Dalton. "We knew the dad of that kid," Kirk says. "He was always put - ting pressure on his son to not get beaten by me. It was always a challenge for us." Tammy's career advanced to the AMA Grand National cir - cuit; as a novice and junior, she battled riders like Billy Herndon on her way to obtaining her Expert license in Class C racing. She connected with Lawrence "Smitty" Smith of Smitty's Harley- Davidson in Moundsville, West Virginia, who put her on what was going to become her favorite motorcycle—the XR750. "I loved going fast" she says today "and I loved that motor - cycle. I only weighed 115 pounds back then, so it was kind of a challenge on the half-miles, but I really felt at home on the miles. job, she put her younger sister even for Tammy to see that girls who play (Right) Tammy and her father, Tommy, were quite the team. Tommy made sure Tammy had what she needed to beat the boys. (Left) In 1983, Kirk became the first female to qualify for an AMA dirt track final.

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