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Cycle News 2023 Issue 48 December 5

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 DECEMBER , P119 move that he would later regret. "I was stupid," he said, "to try and pass there." Kessler wound up stuffing only himself—straight into the ground! He was quick to remount but not quickly enough to stay with Theiss, who motored to his first-ever AMA National moto victory. The second moto did not go as well for the Nebraskan with an eventual 12th-place finish, but still good enough to net him a second overall behind Team Ya - maha's Mike Bell. Theiss would finish the 500cc series with a solid 10th place in the 1979 500c points. In the fall of '79, Theiss topped the field in the Support class of the Trans USA series at the opening round at Mid-Ohio. He would continue his winning streak when the se - ries moved to Red- Bud in Buchanan, Michigan. Though his results slipped over the remain - ing rounds, he still finished the series in fourth place, mak - ing 1979 a success. Surely, a factory team was going to come calling this time? Silence. And once again, Theiss, with some help from LOP Yamaha, hit the road as privateer in 1980. That summer, Theiss suffered one of his first major injuries, breaking his foot at a local track in Nebraska. On a summer week - end when he should've been try- ing to qualify at the Los Angeles Coliseum for the Superbowl of Motocross, Theiss was instead attending a wedding in Iowa. That evening, Greg and three of his friends were involved in a tragic automobile accident. Two close friends were killed. The injuries he suffered that night would keep him out of racing for the rest of the season and he would never be the same. He returned in 1981 but struggled to get back to his pre- accident speed. He also found himself without any support, and after a couple of races on a Honda CR450R, Theiss hung it up for good. "I had started to make a little money from racing before the accident," he recalls, "and now, I was going to have to spend it all if I wanted to keep racing." Though he would continue to ride locally in Nebraska, his pro career and the pursuit of the fabled factory ride were over. Today, Theiss is retired and still living in Omaha. "I worked very hard in real estate and with other investments while I was in my 20s and 30s, so that I wouldn't have to do anything when I was in my 60s. And I've made it happen!" CN Subscribe to nearly 50 years of Cycle News Archive issues: www.CycleNews.com/Archives the opening round at continue his winning streak when the se over the remain finished the series in fourth place, mak Surely, a factory team was going to Theiss had dreams of being a factory motocrosser and was that close, but the phone call never came. After suffering injuries in an automobile accident, Theiss, pictured here letting Broc Glover pass him at Southwick, attempted a comeback but ended up calling it a career not long after.

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