Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles
Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/1542397
vorccs
"Yawn.
OLN should
stand for
OLdNews."
Pingre_e
Responds To
l{esponse
I am writing in response
to Maft Pursely's
response
to my reaction to his
actions on
the racetrack in
Fontana. Matt and I
got
together in
practice
and in the AMA
Supermoto
race at Fontana when I
came
around
to
lap
him at the end of the race. I
wasn't happy about b€in8 held
up by him,
and he
wasn't happy with me. We
both
expressed our
displeasure, and it really
should have ended there. But when I saw
last week's Cycle News
where he accused
me
of riding back to
the
pits
rather than
fistfight him right on the racetrack, I wasn't
reacting like a liftle
girl,
but more like
a man
with a family
and
gainful
employment with-
in the motorcycle racing
industry
The last thing that OLN or Toyota,
both
of whom I do TV
work for, or Rocer X and
Road Rocer X,
each
of
whom I write for,
would
appreciate is me
getting
inro an
''old-
fashioned dust-up'' with anyone
on a race-
track. Like l4att,
I was mad as hell,
bur
lust
as
I finished the race
before him, lguess lgot
over my temper tantrum before him as well.
I apologize to
everyone involved in the
series for actinS like
some kind of disgrun-
tled former factory rider-turned-reporter,
and lapologize for Matt for
not
hanging
back and further makinS a fool
out of
myself
by holding
a
fistflght
at the finish line. I
would have been okay with losing a fight,
but not my
job
or
my
sponsors.
I reSret my actions on
the track and the
heated
words I served up to the Cycie News
reporter, but I do not regret my
de€ision to
end it then
and there.
Dovid Pingra
Temeculo,
CA
Goodwin
On
Brymer
I read
Larry Lawrence's anicle about Don
Brymer
(Archives,
lvlay 24). What
you
and
many
ofyour readers may not
be aware of is
that Don
also
was
the catalyst for Supercross
and the millions of dollars the top racers
are
now making, including
Ricky Camichael's
well-deserved
estimated
$8-
l0 million -
as
wellas
the
huge
expansion of motocross and
other types of off-road motorcycling
because
of Supercross. I am ceftain it is now
a multibillion
dollar business.
The humble beginning is an interesting
story
I
had taken the
gal
I hoped
to one day
marD/
to a bi8 motocross in Carlsbad either
in 1969 or 1970. I don't recall whether
it
was an Edison Dye
or a Gavin Trippe event,
but I believe Europeans
were there. The
lady.
Diane Seidel. was singularly unim-
pressed-
She told
me that she couldn't stand
the dust, the
overflowing toilets, the cold
hot dogs and hot beer, the sound system
you
could not hea[
the lack of comfortable
seats and the fact that after one or two laps
you
couldn't tell who was in
the lead and
you
had to
wait another minute for
the
"show"
to come back into
view, lt also did-
n't help that it
took us a couple of hours to
get
out of the disorganized
park.
Diane told me that if I
ever took her to
another event like that she would never
go
out with me
again.
I
remember all that like
it was
yesterday.
I also had
prior
experience with many
of
these
problems
from the
promoter's point
of view. ln
the
late
60s, as Iwas
growing
my
music business I developed a
spectator-ori-
ented short-course for
off-road buggies in
the
hills
east of San Diego, called Hell On A
Hill Raceway. Even
at our first race we
drew a very large
€rowd; so large that we
couldn't
get
everyone on to the
park prop-
erty, and
after the event it truly was hours
of hell
getting
everyone out of the Helter
Skelter
parking.
ln addition, and
the clinch-
er that
closed us down, was that in
the
large
chicken
ranch
next to the racetrack, the
noise and dust had caused
the chickens to
go
into a
pecking
frenzy
-
2000 of them
died that we had to
pay
for.
At
the time I was
just
moving
along
hap-
pily
as a successful music
promoter.
Diane and I decided to take
a
year
off to
travel in an RV We went
to Alaska
first.
and
then
toward Central America, beinS in
Belize at the time a momentous
event
occurred, a trr-re
epiphany an associate
from the music business,
John
Bradley, who
later
produced
many of our Supercross
tel-
evision shows, was forwarding
magazines
to me in the capital of each
country we
planned
to visit. I had
been a longtime trvo-
wheel enthusiast, so
John
was forwardinS
motorcycle maga2ines
along with lime
magazines,
etc.
One evening I had skimmed through
an
issue of Motorcyclist
magazine, tossing it
on
the floor for
later, closer scrutiny. But then I
noticed it had fallen open to
an article I had
skipped over. The article
talked about
Brymer's sell-out for
short-track motorcy-
cle races at Madison
Square Garden. I
immediately
thought
that
if Don
can do that
with short trackers, couldn't I cram a
motocross track into
a stadium? Over a few
stiff drinks, Diane
and I tossed the idea
around,'ryVhat if that race I took
you
to, that
you
hated so
badly, was in a stadium so you
could see
the entire racetrack with no dust,
from comfortable seats with
clean rest-
rooms,
cold beer, etc.
-
wouldn't that
be
exciting?" Diane made it realeasy. She said,
"lf
you
could
pull
that off, I'll
marry
you."
The
die
was
cast, I called a friend at
Olympia brewerT to see if he
would spon-
sor it and he
said
yes.
We then made
a
four-
day around-the-clock
drive back
to
Southern
California.
The Los Angeles Coliseum was the only
stadium that I
knew of that would fit what I
was looking for. I
called and spoke with the
general
manager, Bill Nicklaus, assuming he
would tum
me down. But low and
behold,
his
son raced a Elultaco in motocross
events. and he liked the idea. I
sketched the
first
track on a co(ktail napkin
that, unfortu-
nately,
I didn't keep. The track for the 1972
Superbowl of Motocross at
the L.A.
Coliseum, the first motocross in
a stadium,
built by trial and error cost
$21,000.
Bill Boyce, an old-time flat-tracker, then
the race director for AMA, saw the
poten-
tial and went way out on a limb and took
a
gamble
to sanction it. We received
tons of
help from the only
gr-ry
in
the world, who at
that time, had
won both the 250cc and
500cc World Flotocross
Champronships -
Rolf Tibblen.
I couldn't have done that with-
out him
and many other folks. I wish I knew
how
to contact Rolfnow He really deserves
the title,
"The
co-father
of Supercross."
Sixteen-year
old
phenomenon
l4arty
Tripes won in front
of about 27,000 fans
-
|
believe
the most, up until that time, to ever
watch
a motocross in America. Rick Simon
of Di.t Bike maSazine, one ofthe most influ-
ential race writers at the time, called it
the
"Salad
bowl of Motocross" and
predicted
a
quick
demise for this tomfoolery-
The rest, as they say, is history- At
one time
our Supercross
events held five ofthe top-10
all-time aftendance
[numbers],
ever, at
Anaheim
Stadium for any type of event includ-
ing number
two, behind only Billy Graham.
An
experienced motonports wrter recertly
told me we still hold those records. What
a
rush it was
to be a
part
of this
growth.
A big
thanks for
being the catal/st, or
perhapE
the
Srandfathe[
of Supercross to Don Brymer.
Mike Goodlr,in
vio the ,nternet
Mike Goodwin is cuilently in
the
Los Angeles
County
Joil
where he hos been
since he wos
orrested on December I 3. 200 l,
for
the nur-
der of
former
roce
profioter
ond
off-rood leg-
end Micky ThomPson ond
his
wife,
Trudy.
Goodwin's ttiol begon
recently in Posadeno,
Cdlifonia, ond will
rcsume on
lune
7... Editor
Old News
Someone should tell the marketing folks
at
AMA
Pro Racing
that
having
OLN televise the
Supermoto series is like having
the')American
ldol" decided
before the show airs.
OLN
has
been all about hockey and bull-
riding reruns
for the most
part.
with a liftle
bass
fishing
tossed in. Yawn. OLN should
stafld for OLdNews.
Poul MctGndrl
Ben4 OR
CYCLE
NEWS
.
JUNE r 4, 2006
5
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