Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 50 December 16

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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FEATURE MOTOAMERICA P102 long roadracers when it came to taming beastly 500cc two-stroke fours, bikes that produced im- mense and peaky horsepower that outstripped the chassis and tire technology of the day. The U.S. had readymade superstars who could exploit this fact and their superior throttle control eas- ily overcame the long list of disadvantages that they faced—unfamiliar equipment, tracks, locales, etc. However, over time chassis and tire develop- ments dulled that advantage, and modern electron- ics finally rendered it completely obsolete. "TODAY, THE BEST PATH TO SUCCESS IS MORE SIMILAR TO BASEBALL. THE MOST PROMISING TALENTS ARE FREQUENTLY SNAPPED UP DIRECTLY BY MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL TEAMS AND REROUTED TO THEIR MINOR LEAGUE SYSTEMS WHILE NCAA BASEBALL LARGELY SUFFERS AS A RESULT." ing, both on television and in person. While a damn good start, that alone won't guar- antee success. The 2011 AMA Pro Road Racing season provided perhaps the best racing the series has ever seen, but that fact did practically nothing to stave off the series' plummeting fortunes. DEVELOPING FUTURE WORLD CHAMPIONS Along with raising the profile of road racing in North America, the other explicit goal of MotoAmerica is to produce riders capable of competing interna- tionally. Rainey himself was a multi-time 500GP champ and one of the greatest in a long-line of American Grand Prix stars who owned the World Champion- ship for a near-two decade run from the late-'70s to the mid-'90s. It's a noble and necessary objective. The cur- rent state of Americans in MotoGP is dire indeed. Prior to the 2014 season, there had been at least one (and generally far more than one) American with a factory ride in the premier class dating back to the pre-Roberts days in the mid-'70s. Now it's far easier to imagine the grid being completely de- void of Americans than it is to imagine one with an American on works equipment. But simply improving the health of the racing in the United States is unlikely to be enough to pro- duce another MotoGP World Champion. The era of Roberts, Lawson, Rainey, and Schwantz is not simply gone, it is not replicable. That was a perfect storm. A veritable fluke of tal- ent, training, technology, and timing. In an odd confluence of factors, riders raised riding side- ways in the dirt held a distinct advantage over life-

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