Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 09 March 4 2014

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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VOL. 51 ISSUE 9 MARCH 4, 2014 P33 Americans Colin Edwards and Nicky Hayden completed the three days in 14th and 15th, respectively. Both of their fast laps came on the final day. While Edwards has some hope in the form of his teammate Espargaro riding to the fourth fastest time, Hayden left the test disgruntled with the performance of his new Honda. MICK WOOLETT PASSES C alm, resourceful, determined and infinitely well-connect- ed, Mick Woollett, who passed away peacefully in his sleep at home in Britain on February 18 at the age of 84, was for more than three decades one of the world's most experienced and widely read motorcycle sports journal- ists. His race reports provided the only link for generations of road racing fans in those pre-in- ternet days with the events of the previous weekend in race pad- docks around the globe. From 1956 onwards, Wool- lett was a professional Grand Prix sidecar passenger, initially with 1952 World Champion Cyril Smith, then with Belgian Jack Wijns and later with Swiss Edgar Strub, with whom he finished fifth in the 1959 Isle of Man Side- car TT. By then Woollett had be- gun supplementing his meager earnings as a sidecar swinger by writing reports of the GP events he attended, and phoning them in to the newly launched MCN/ Motor Cycle News weekly news- paper. He also began writing fea- ture articles on GP paddock life, leading him to retire from racing and in 1961 become sports edi- tor of Britain's oldest magazine, Motor Cycling; and, when the two merged in 1967, its competi- tor Motor Cycle. In due course he became edi- tor of its successor Motor Cycle Weekly when it became a tab- loid paper, before anticipating the subsequent boom in two- wheeled nostalgia by becoming founding editor-in-chief of The Classic Motor Cycle in 1981. Woolett was a fine photog- rapher as well as reporter, and many of his action photos taken during the golden age of GP rac- ing in the 1950s and '60s have become iconic images of an un- forgettable era. Woolett was uniquely respect- ed by riders because he'd done it all himself, and was personal friends with many of them. That in turn led to countless scoops and insider tips. He was also as- tute enough to repeatedly be in the right place at the right time to take a rare unclothed photo of a Japanese or Italian factory racer without the bodywork on, revealing its inner workings to his countless readers all over the world, but especially in Britain. Woollett was also the first to cover the Daytona 200 for non- American readers, and reported on its growth into a major world motorcycle event in the 1970s. Woolett also wrote eleven books that have become the standard work on many topics, including Norton, Mike Hailwood, Honda Racers in the Golden Age, and The Grand Prix Riders. He is survived by his wife Peta, and three children, Joanne, Paul and Guy. Alan Cathcart Motorsports writer Mick Woolett (right) passed away on February 18. Here the former sidecar racer is pictured with driver Edgar Strub.

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