Cycle News

Cycle News 2024 Issue 06 February 13

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 , P107 "Once I started racing," Haney recalls, "that was it. It was all I wanted to do. I did scrambles, TT events, flat track, desert, and what we called rough scrambles because the term 'moto-cross' hadn't come to the U.S. yet." Motorcycling became all his life. In 1957, he landed his job at Harry D. Foster Triumph, which was the second-oldest Triumph dealership in the U.S. "Harry was the best guy you could ever meet. He would give you the shirt off his back," Foster said. "And he was a great me - chanic. I tell people he could make chicken salad out of chicken poop." Foster provided Haney with steady work but stopped short when it came to Haney's race ef - fort. "He was supportive, but the only sponsorship I received was being able to buy parts at dealer cost," Haney remembers. "I did the rest of it all by myself." He had received his AMA Class C professional license in 1962, but it would be a full decade later before he made his way out of the state for a major race, the Peoria TT in Illinois. At the famous TT track, he quali- fied well and rode hard, narrowly missing out on a podium spot. "I had passed Mert Lawwill and was running in third for most of the race. Mert wasn't going to let some no-name like me beat him, so he passed me back on the last lap!" Peoria was a tough track, and Haney's impressive fourth place showed the Class C world that he wasn't just a one-trick pony, an Ascot specialist who could only win in his own zip code. But when the race was over, Haney, once again, returned to his home state, back to his job at the Tri - umph shop where he made $120 per week. In the fall of '72, Haney took a visit to a California frame shop where they welded up Redline frames. In the 1970s, every seri - ous dirt track racer had a Red- line frame, which was designed specifically for competition. He was chatting with owner Lynn Kasten, a conversation that eventually led to the workshop where Kasten showed Haney a brand new, race-ready chassis. A Redline frame was admission to the show, but it came at a ticket scalper's price of $410. "That was a lot of money in 1972," Haney says, "especially when you're making a hundred bucks a week!" While Haney stared at the chassis, likely thinking about the possibilities, Kasten dropped (Left) Haney, here leading Eddie Mulder, cut his racing teeth at his local track, Ascot Park. (Right) One of Haney's claims to fame is winning the Houston TT in 1972.

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