Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 11 March 18 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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CN III ARCHIVES BY LARRY LAWRENCE D anny Eslick's victory in this year's Daytona 200 must have put big smiles on the faces of a lot of people in Hinckley, England. That's the home of Triumph Motorcycles and while the company has been going strong for years now, the victory in the Daytona 200 truly marks that the Triumph is fully back in American racing. 'Win on Sunday, Sell on Monday' the saying goes. If that's the case the Tri- umph Daytona 675 should be a popular bike on showrooms this spring and summer. Triumph had a proud tradition of racing in Amer- ica, including a stellar decade at Daytona in the 1960s when three different riders rode Triumphs to victory in the Daytona 200. Triumph is best known for getting involved at Daytona starting in the 1950s, but riders began showing up and racing on the beach on Triumphs as early as 1939, the third year of the event. The first recorded finish by a Triumph at Daytona was turned in by a rider named Raoul Mikes, listed from Miami. Mikes finished 35th giving the Brit- ish marquee its first Daytona result. Mikes was one of two Triumph riders in the field that day, the other being Saginaw, Michigan's Junior Muehlen- back who finished 46th. The number of Triumph riders doubled to four in 1940 with Red Lemery leading the way with a 17th- place result. Entries doubled again in 1941 to eight Triumphs, with Rex Miller from Atlanta the top rider in 30th. And that was it for the Coventry-built bikes. World War II came and the town of Coventry was virtually destroyed by German bombing. Tooling and machinery was recovered from the site of the devastation and production restarted at the new plant at Meriden after the war. When racing resumed at Daytona in 1947, Herb Groves of St. Petersburg, Florida, earned the dis- tinction of becoming the first Triumph rider to fin- ish inside the top 10 of the Daytona 200, when he scored an eighth. TRIUMPH IS BACK P156 Thanks to the efforts of Johnson Motors, Tri- umph first became widely popular on the West Coast during the 1950s and many top-notch rid- ers began racing the British machine. San Jose's Phil Cancilla gave Triumph its best finish to date in 1948 when he finished sixth. You can point to 1950 as the year Triumph re- ally started making headlines on the track and began exploding in sales. That's when Ed Kretz made the switch to Triumph and by 1951 riders like Walt Fulton, Sr. and Jimmy Phillips were win- ning other AMA Nationals on Triumphs, although Daytona remained elusive. Hollywood's Tex Luse gave Triumph its first Daytona 200 podium result in 1951. By 1953 Triumph was rolling on the East Coast too. Ed Fisher won Laconia on a Triumph

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