Cycle News

Cycle News 2026 Issue 25 June 23

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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Subscribe to more than 60 years of Cycle News Archives issues: www.CycleNews.com/Archives While inspecting the damage I'd inflicted to his KDX, he noticed a large crack in the intake mani- fold boot, which had probably digested who knows how much gunk. Even if it hadn't, he didn't want to take any chances and said he'd rather I not ride the bike anymore. Oh, darn. Yeah, after a good night's sleep, I was disappointed the next morning to watch everyone suit up and start the loop around Mauna Kea without me. I do not like not finishing races. I might be last, but at least I'll finish. I can remember only one other race, okay, two, where I didn't finish with a working motorcycle underneath me. The Mauna Kea, however, was the first. It was the first race that had ever beaten me. Hard. The winner that week - end, by the way, was Honolulu City Councilman John DeSoto. I returned to race the Mauna Kea 200 three more times and finished each time. I got bet- ter, too. The last one, I was in the top five overall before the jungle got me the last 10 or so miles the next day. My throttle arm locked up and I sank down the leaderboard faster than the Titanic. The winner that day was my good friend, former room - mate Ron Lawson from Dirt Bike magazine. In his first attempt! Not long afterward, the race seemed to slip into silence. I stopped hearing about it. I later learned it kind of went into "outlaw" mode for a while. Evi - dently, the race had become too large and too popular, making it increasingly difficult for the orga- nizers to host. They tried making it a shorter one-day event, but that didn't save it. Some people say I/Cycle News had something to do with its demise, bringing too much national attention to it and too many of the wrong eyes on it. But environmental issues and land preservation were most likely the real killers, like so many other great races. The Mauna Kea 200 was definitely one of the greats that few "mainlanders" ever got to race, but those who did, know just how awesome it was. I feel fortunate to be one of them. CN There were no such things as GoPros back then, but we did have pocket cameras. I'd race ahead, buy a little time, stop, and take a couple of shots. You could do that in old-school timekeeping enduros like the Mauna Kea 200. CNIIARCHIVES P134

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