Cycle News

Cycle News 2013 Issue 33 August 20

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/155043

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 120 of 127

CN III ARCHIVES P122 BY LARRY LAWRENCE THE ROCKFORD ROCKET B y all rights Bill Tuman shouldn't have made the main at the 1953 Springfield Mile. The stakes were high. That was when Springfield was the winner-take-all championship event of the season and the rider who won Springfield was the AMA National Champion - and it wasn't looking good for Tuman. In his heat race he'd collided with another rider and his number plate folded over and was rubbing against his rear tire. Finally the friction melted the number plate enough that the rear wheel on Tuman's Indian Sport Scout began to spin freely. It came down to the last lap. He was running in last place, but typical of the mile in Springfield, Illinois, the draft had kept the pack together. As they came out of the final turn, Tuman was looking for daylight. "I came out on the straightaway for the flag and they were all lined up across the track up front and there was no place for me to go," Tuman explained. "Old Dick Klamfoth knew I was coming. He moved over a little bit, I reeled up on him, took a little hide off his arm and I was in there and got the last transfer spot." While Tuman had gotten into the main, just barely, he had an even bigger challenge facing him in the final. It was loaded that year with riders like Joe Leonard, Everett Brashear, Paul Goldsmith, Ernie Beckman and Bobby Hill just to name a few. None was faster that day though than Californian Al Gunter on his British-made BSA. Up against a field of American iron – Indians and Harleys – Tuman said Bill Tuman won the AMA's Most Popular Rider Award in 1950. Here he accepts the award along with that year's Most Popular Female Rider, Dot Robinson. Gunter's BSA was easily the fastest motorcycle on the track. What saved Tuman and gave him the chance to win the AMA number-one plate that August day in 1953? Tuman explains. "Albert Gunter's BSA twin had 20 miles per hour on us on the straights, but he had one problem, the thing couldn't go around a corner. So I wound up with the number one and that was it." Tuman was the last single-day winner of the AMA Grand National Championship, the result of his victory at the Springfield Mile in 1953. Tuman was part of Indian Motorcycle's famous racing team that was dubbed the "Indian Wrecking Crew", a group of top racers in the late 1940s and early '50s that included Bobby Hill, Ernie Beckman and Tuman. Tuman won a total of five AMA Grand Nationals

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News 2013 Issue 33 August 20