Cycle News

Cycle News 2016 Issue 03 January 26

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 T he late 1960s and early 1970s were an exciting and dynamic time in American motorcycle road racing. The world was starting to get an indication that American riders weren't completely clueless on the pave- ment. Foreigners were coming to Day- tona and finding the Yanks were plenty fast. The domination of Harley-Davidson and the British makers was slowly coming to an end as the Japanese makers made major leaps on the racing ladder. Suzuki with Art Baumann was the first Japanese brand to break through and win an AMA Road Race National (technically Yamaha actually was the first with Dick Mann's victory in the "250 Na- tional," an AMA Grand National points-paying race that featured 250cc machines at Nelson Ledges in 1965, but that's an another story). Baumann's Suzuki victory came in September of 1969 at Sears Point, in Sonoma, California. Honda was next with Dick Mann winning the prestigious Day- tona 200 on the revolutionary CB750 in March of 1970. Kel Carruthers put Yamaha on the board with his road race victory at Road America in April of 1971. That left Kawasaki as the lone Japanese manufacturer that hadn't won an AMA Road Race National. With Kawasaki's recent announcement that it was pulling out of AMA Pro Road Racing, we thought it was a good time to look back and review Big Green's historic first national road race win. It came in September of 1971 at the brutally hot and humid Talladega Superspeedway (then called Alabama International Speedway), inter- estingly, a race that was carried live on radio stations across the country on the Motor Racing Network (MRN). The rider who won at Talladega that day was none other than the speedy, but sometimes accident prone, French Canadian Yvon DuHamel, nicknamed "Super Frog" in the politically incorrect vernacular of the time. DuHamel had been racing in Canada since the late 1950s and began his forays south of the border by the early 1960s. By 1968 DuHamel was a formidable 250 Grand Prix competitor KAWASAKI'S FIRST NATIONAL P102

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