Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 Issue 43 October 27

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 ave Roper was racing vintage bikes be- fore there was even a class for them. "I just raced old bikes against modern bikes," Roper said. Throughout the history of vintage motor- cycle racing in America Roper has been on the scene and consistently one of the top competitors. If there ever was a Mr. Vintage, Roper is it. He's still riding and winning today and such is the appreciation of Dave in vintage racing circles that he was honored at the recent Barber Vintage Festival with a painting of him racing the Isle of Man by Gregg Bonelli. His fellow racers gave Roper a standing ovation at the presentation. It's plain to see that Roper is a cherished icon among the vintage racing crowd and when you hear his story it's easy to understand. Roper grew up in Darien, Con- necticut. "I'd go up to Lime Rock Park to watch the sports cars and always thought I wanted to do that," Roper said. "It wasn't until kind of late in high school that I got introduced to motorcycles and I did a complete flip and lost all interest in four-wheelers and became obsessed with motorcycles." Roper didn't take up racing until after he got out of the Army. Roper's brother went to high school with Rich Schlachter and the three of them used to hang out together. Schlachter and Roper's brother had Kawasaki H1s. Roper, who was by then living in Old Lyme, Connecticut, saw a poster for an AAMRR motorcycle road race at Bridge- hampton. "We went on the Ferry and went to Bridge- hampton and that was our first race," Roper recalls. "It was Memorial Day, 1972." At that first road race weekend Roper had planned on just spectating, but found out there was an endurance race on Monday. "I kept bugging my brother to enter the endur- ance race and finally he said, 'Why don't you en- ter it?' Schlachter had seized his H1, so we took the front end off of his bike and put that and his number plates on my Kawasaki Big Horn, which I'd turned into a Café racer. We took the front end off Schlachter's bike because the brakes were so bad on mine." Unfortunately the Big Horn seized after just three laps and sent Roper over the bars. He spent the night in the hospital, but he said in just three laps of road racing he was hooked. He raced the Big Horn the rest of the year and then moved up to a Yamaha TD3 the next year. He suffered a big crash in the AMA Road Race National at Dallas that next year and suffered bad injuries. MR. VINTAGE P114

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