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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/1542395
,77.
tn Point
ond Neilson Ritler 5€qri
IMES
The
Ringer
to corpoiate sponsorships, today it's
lnfineon Raceway, but most
racers
still
call
the
gnarly
road course
in
Sonoma, Califor-
nia, Sears Point. Sears was always a tough
venue for the AMA
regulars, not only
because the tmck was, and remains, one of the
most
technical circuits on the
calendar, it was also full of mov-
ing landmines
in
the
form of seriously fast
AFM racers
who called the track home.
The list of Nonhem
Califomia aces that showed up
the national
guys
at Sears
is long. lt includes riders such
as smooth-riding endurance racer-tumed-sprinter,
I 988
Supersport winner David
Deveau;
James
Randolph, the
1994 Superstock
victor who was known for his
insane
lean angles
(one
of the original elbow draggers); and
Thomas Montano, a
veteran who after l7
years
of hon-
inE his skills to a
razor's
edge
at Sears, who finally scored
an emotional win in Pro Thunder there in
I 999.
Of all Nor Calspecialiss,
the one who scored the sin-
gle
biggest coup
in the history ofthe Sears Point National
was the original AFM ringer, Paul Ritter.
Ritter didn't
just
humble the big boys at his home
track, he shocked
the AMA
Superbike
regulars
with
his victory on his Dale Newton Ducati
900SS
(which
wore
the undeniably non-national number 276) at
Sears Point in 1977-
Ritter didn't take up motorcycling until
he was in col-
lege at Berkeley in the late 1960s.
"l
was always a fan," Ritter said. "l
read the magazines
and loved racing. Then in college
lgot
a
Honda 350 and
was hooked. By 1972 lcame upon a Ducati Diana and
started trying to
road race-"
He says trying to
race,
because
his liftle 250cc ltalian
four-stroke single was seriously overmatched by the
two-stroke Yamahas
that ruled the roost in his class. ln
wasn't well suited
for racing,
but
he loved to work on the bikes.
Ritter and Newton
teamed
and
the
pair made
a
winning
combo
in AFM club races. By 1977
Newton had
pumped up a new
900
Sport to Superbike specs
and Ritter went on a tear. win-
ning six consecutive times
in
AFM events leading up to that
year's
National at Sears Point.
"We
thought we'd enter the
Superbike National to see how
we stood aSainst the
pros,"
Ritter recalls.
"l
had no
great
expectations. lt was my
pro
debut. They
were looking to fill the
grid,
so instead of earning
the normal
qualifications,
the AMA allowed me to
race on the strength of my AFM experience."
Ritter was a
little in
awe of what
he faced when
he took to the
Brid.
At Sears Point in
'77,
he would
be up against the talents of riders such as defending
champ Reg Pridmore, having moved from the
fa<-
toD/ BMWS to the Racecrafters Kawasaki KZl000,
Cycle magazine editor Cook Neilson on his
Phil
Schilling-prepared, Daytona-winning
Ducati, Ron
Pierce on a Beemer and Steve f'lclaughlin on a
Yoshimura
Kawasaki.
Ritter's
first National was nearly
over before
it
started. A liftle overhyped in the
qualifying
heat race, he
overcooked turn two
and nearly
highsided
in
the
process,
Ritter's body
flew
out of the saddle and
he
crashed back down on the bike, shaftering the bubble on
his
fairing
upon
landing-
''When
I came
back down
it took a
second
for me to
reSain my bearings," Rifter remembers.
"The
adrenaline
did something to me and I suddenly
got
ve.y fast.''
So fast in fact, that he shaved a second off his
personal-best
lap time,
got
into the l:5 I bracket,
chased
down the
leaders
and
passed
Neilson on
the
linal turn to win the heat.
'Afterward,
lhad no idea how lwon that
race," he said.
'All
I could do was,ust sit there and
think how lucky I was to not crash."
Ritter thought his nerves were bad before
Saturday's heat race. He was even more anxious,
even scared,
he
said, before the start of
the flnal.
Perhaps the realization that he actually had a shot
at winning
the
race hit him-
Another
bad
start forced Ritter to have to
work his way through the field. He eventually
made it through and
past
the Pridmore/Pierce
battle, and had only Neilson in front of him. As
the laps wound down it didn't look as
if
Rifter
would catch the Daytona winner on the California
hot rod, but then he
got
a break. Neilson's bike
developed a clutch
problem
that slowed him,
Ritter closed the
gap
and with two laps to
go
made the
pass
and suddenly broke through to a clear track
in front
of him. He
pulled
away from the ailing bike of Neilson's
and took the checkered as winner.
It marked one of the rarest moments in AMA
Superbike history
-
a rider being victorious in his debut.
"l was
quite
happy," futter deadpans.
'iAll
the AFM
folks
were
iumping
up and down. The win actually took
on mqre importance over the
/ears.
lEuess as Superbike
ra€ing
gained
in
popularity
even/thing was magnified,"
lnspired by their victory Ritter and Newton tackled
the entire series the next season.
No
longer an
unknown, Ritter defended his Sears
Point victory in
1978, and finished third in the final standings that
year.
By the end of
l97g the
Japanese
fours had finally
found handling to
match
the
ltalian's bike awesome
power,
and the Ducatis fell from competitiveness for a
dozen or so
years.
Newton
Eot
out of it and
Rifter, with-
out a sponsor and mechanic, never seriously
pursued
the
series a8ain.
ln 1998 Ritter
faced
the biggest challenge
of his life
when, after nearly 20
years
away from the sport, he
carne back to race a vintage event in Steamboat Springs,
Colorado,
and was caught up in a
freak high-speed crash
when a rider highsided and landed on top of
him.
The accident resulted in Riner being
paralyzed
from
midchest down.
After a
few
yea.s
of struggle
Ritter began to rebuild
his life. His disability didn't stop him from experiencing
life ro the fullesr-
ln many ways Rifter is more active
than
most. He's ridden motorcycles a8ain, rides a
three-wheeled electric mountain bike, enjoys camping
and
has
even become
a certified scuba diver. ln 20O4
he married
his wife, Dee, a former motocross racer.
Ritter now lives in Oregon, work as a software engi-
neer, and continues
to follow road racing. Ever faithful
tq his favorite ltalian brand, he keeps rooting for a
Ducati comeback in Superbike.
Today local riders still
give
series regulars fits at
lnfineon Raceway, but
it
will be
hard for any of them to
ever duplicate the feat that Paul Ritter accomplished at
Sears
Point on that magical day nearly 30
years
ago. Ol
IO4
MAY
3I,
2006
.
CYCTE
Nf W5
BY LARRY LAWnENCE
A
(D.
)
L-,-.
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Poul nifior Ehowld up
ot
Seors
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