Cycle News - Archive Issues - 2000's

Cycle News 2006 Issue 17 May 3

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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IVES s F 2006 Al'4A Supermoto Championship kick off on April 29 at Califomia Speedway. Jurgen Kunzel, Jeff \!hrd, Doug Henry and the rest will all vie for the championship this year, but 27 years ago Kent Howerton came out on top in a lield that read like a who's who of motorcycle rac- ing to win the inauSural ABC Wide World of Sports Super- bikers race at Carlsbad Raceway near San Diego. An ABC Spors producer put the question to promoter Gavin Trippe why the best road racers didn't race the top motocross and dirt-track riders. lnstead oftrying to explain the differences, Trippe began to formulate the idea of bringingallthe riders together to compete on a track made of elements of a.ll three genres of racing. After Trippe accomplished the monumentaltask ofconvincing the man- ufacturers to build oneofl bikes for this special made-for- television event he had his race in November of 1979. The field of riders brouSht together for the first ABC Superbikerc was nothing shon of spectacular. Three world champs were in the field - 500cc Grand Prix road- racing champion Kenny Roberts; Hakan Carlqvist, the 250cc World Motocross champ; and World Speedway Champion Peter Collins. ln addition, a slew of the best American motorcycle racers further bolstered the field. Road racerc such as Freddie Spencer and Eddie Lawson would go head to head against some of the top names in motocross, such as Howerton, lefl Ward and Steve Wise and in {lat track with riders that included Mike Kidd, Steve Eklund, David Aldana and others. About the only notable no-shows were Jay Springsteen (home sick) and Bob Hannah who was sidelined with a broken leg. The first year of the Superbikers was especially inter- esting since it brought together a varied group of bikes, s "There were four-stroke Honda and Yamaha 500cc short-track bikes, big two- stroke motocross racers like ours, Triumph and Norton twins and even the big Harley V-Twin flat track racers." remembers Greg Arnette, Howerton's mechanic and co- builder of the winning Suzuki Rl'4400. Howerton said they didn't know ror sure what kind of tires to use and at flrst tried knobbies. "They weren't too bad," he recalls. "Except for being a little squirrelly on the paYement," Eventually Howerton settled on spe- cially cut Goodyear flat-track tires (a l9 inch on the front and 18" rear), The Goodyear's provide excellent traction on the pavement, in fact too much for the ultralight- weight Suzuki frame. ''That bike had a work motor and had a bunch of alu- minum and titanium," Arnette recalled. "But the frame was made to be really light for motocrors and it flexed like crazy with the st!'esses put on it on the road course section-'' Some of the top names didn't even make to the flnal. Robens crashed his Yamaha TT500 in practice when a shock bolt broke, injuring his shoulder and ankle in the process- Spencer crashed on pavement that accidenally got wet when track workers watered the dirt section, and Lawson's Kawasaki seized in his heat race. Another prerace favorite was David Aldana, who had ample e)(perience in motocross, dirt track and road rac- ing. He rode a Honda 500cc four-stroke single. "We were underpowered," said Aldana, who raced with knobbies in the final and finished eighth, iust behind Steve Wise and just ahead of Alex Jorgensen. "The two- stroke motocross bikes proved to be a lot faster than the four-stroke singles." Even with a slightly de-tuned motor lor a softer power delivery Howenon's Suzuki hit I l0 mph on the straight- away section of Carlsbad Speedway's Superbikers course. "Our bike was pretty fast," Howerton re

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