Wednesday, December 28, 2011

TRAILBLAZERS ELECT STEVE SCOTT TO HALL OF FAME

The Trailblazers Motorcycle Club has announced Steve Scott as the fifth of its 2012 Hall of Fame inductees. He joins previously announced inductees Jim McMurren, Eddie Lawson, Bob Sirkegian Sr. and Dan Rouit to be honored at its 68th annual banquet on Saturday, April 14th.

While many motorcycle racers of his era specialized in one certain aspect of the sport, Steve Scott excelled in many different types of events ranging from Scrambles and TT to Short Track, Half-Mile, Motocross, Speedway, Roadracing, the Elsinore Grand Prix and the famed Pikes Peak Hillclimb.

He started riding motorcycles in 1957 on dirt roads in the Santa Monica mountains. Some of his first bikes included Whizzer, Powell and Cushman scooters, a 125cc James, 125cc and 165cc Harley-Davidson Hummers, an old Tiger Cub with plunger suspension and a Honda 50cc C110. In 1963 he bought a 1961 Tiger Cub that he raced at Acton, Spencer Park and El Toro Speedway. That same year he also got into the motorcycle business, working at Honda of Santa Monica.

In 1964 he purchased a used 200cc Bultaco Sherpa S to race ACA Short Tracks at El Toro and earned the #1 plate there for 1964 & ’65. He also rode Ascot 1/2-mile and TTs as an AMA Class C Novice. “It was a good year, and very educational,” said Steve, “I got to eat a lot of dust by the likes of Gene Romero, Malcolm Smith, Jimmy Nicholson, Chuck Palmgren, Paul Conserriere, Glen Hayes, Sonny Nutter and many others.” Steve joined the Dirt Diggers Motorcycle Club that year and in Amateur racing earned the District 37 #2 lightweight plate. His success on the Bultaco got the attention of Doug and Wally Yerkes from Bultaco Western. Not only did they support his racing efforts, but they gave him a job too.

In an age of lightweight racing dominated by Triumph Cubs and Harley Sprints, Steve changed the landscape dramatically in 1965 when he got one of the first 250cc yellow Bultaco Metisse race bikes and earned the #1 District 37 plate. A lot of weeks he would race 5 times or more a week in Scrambles, Short Tracks and TTs at Ascot and El Cajon Speedway. El Cajon had an AMA Class C lightweight and heavyweight championship and Steve ended up high point lightweight rider for the year (Trailblazers Hall of Famer Jack Simmons was high point heavyweight class rider). Steve also went on the road for Bultaco Western that year setting up dealers and doing some racing in Oklahoma and also up at the Sidewinders TT in Portland, Oregon where he finished 1st place in the 250cc class.

In 1966 he decided to stay closer to home and with a lot of help from Bultaco Western, opened Steve’s Bultaco in North Hollywood. Motocross was just getting started in America and Steve raced some of the first events held here, including the Dirt Diggers first race at Hopetown. World MX Champion Torsten Hallman was there, which made it an international event. Steve got the hole shot and lead the race for a while, ultimately finishing 2nd to Hallman and first American rider.

By 1967 Steve had his Class C Expert Competition license and raced Ascot TTs on Larry Wilburn’s 650 Triumph and Larry rode his Bultaco. “I got the better part of that deal!” Steve remembers. In the 1968 Elsinore 100-mile Grand Prix, Steve got 1st overall on a new Bultaco 360cc El Bandito and also raced in a few Speedway races. He sold Steve’s Bultaco in 1969 and went to Spain to race Motocross for Bultaco. But after a couple of months came down with Hepatitis and returned to the United States to recoup.

In 1972 he started manufacturing aftermarket Bultaco parts such as engine gaskets, clutch springs, fork springs and tools, etc…parts that were sometimes hard to find at Bultaco dealers. That year he also raced the Pikes Peak Hillclimb for the first time. On a rainy and cold day, Steve started the race from the last row on a 250cc Bultaco Astro and about halfway up got the lead and held it to the finish. He was protested, but found to be legal and declared the 250cc class winner. He went on to win the 250cc class the next five years in a row.

In 1976 he sold his house and moved to Woodland Park, CO, which is at the base of Pikes Peak. He opened a motorcycle distributing company selling his line of parts and accessories and other motorcycle products to dealers in Colorado and throughout the USA.

Steve won his sixth 250cc pro race at Pikes Peak in 1979, then his long-running string of success at Pikes Peak had a dry spell for a few years with various mechanical problems. But at the 1985 Pikes Peak Hillclimb, American Honda donated 15 new 350cc XRs to be raced in a Jolly Rancher Celebrity Challenge by some previous winners and other invited riders, including Malcolm Smith. Despite the legendary competition that day, Steve took home the winner’s trophy.

Showing his versatility, Steve got into roadracing in the mid-1980s. In 1985 he rode a couple of 6 Hour roadraces with teammate Chuck Lee. “We made a good team,” said Steve. “Chuck was fast and I was ‘fast enough’ at Aspen and we finished 2nd overall in the Superbike class.” Then they scored an overall victory at Pueblo International Raceway at round #12 of the US Endurance Championship. Steve recalled, “Chuck got the holeshot and about 2 hours into the race it started raining. We lapped the field many times, being dirt trackers we liked it sideways!”

Later in the year Steve got invited to the Superbikers race at Carlsbad. His first ride in that all-new type of event did not go great. He rode Rob Muzzy’s 465 Yamaha short tracker and finished 16th in the main. But in 1993 he returned to Carlsbad for another try. He rode a CR500 Honda in the 500 pro class and finished 3rd in his last competitive event to date.

The Trailblazers congratulates Steve Scott for a lifetime of motorcycling excellence. The 68th annual Trailblazers banquet will be held on Saturday, April 14th at the Carson Center in Carson, CA. The evening’s dinner and awards presentations will follow the Tom Cates Memorial Bike Show which will begin at 3:00 pm. Tickets will go on sale in January online at: www.trailblazersmc.com.

Monday, December 12, 2011

DAN ROUIT ELECTED TO TRAILBLAZERS HALL OF FAME


The Trailblazers M.C. have announced that Dan Rouit will be among its Class of 2012 Hall of Fame inductees to be honored at the 68th annual banquet on April 14, 2012 in Carson, CA. Rouit became a motorcycle rider and enthusiast at an early age and as a teenager was a very active racer competing in both amateur and pro flattrack events. He excelled in Short Track racing and won many events in AMA District 35.

In 1978, Dan experienced a life-changing injury when he suffered a broken neck from a fall while hiking in the nearby mountains. Knowing his racing days were over, Dan and his dad began talking about starting a museum for flat track racing. In 1991 he fulfilled his dream when he and his soon-to-be-wife Kathy pooled their resources and had a building constructed to display historic motorcycles as well as posters, banners, trophies, helmets, programs and photographs. Soon the building was so full you could not walk between the motorcycles. Dan wanted to expand the museum but had limited resources.

Thanks to the generosity of his cousin Joe, a 30 by 60 foot building was added and the Dan Rouit Flattrack Museum had taken shape for motorcycle enthusiasts to come enjoy. But that was not the end of the expansion. In November of 2009, Dan’s need for yet another expansion became a reality with the addition of another 30 by 60 feet of display space. Today the museum holds over 90 flat track motorcycles and is still growing. While the museum has visitors throughout the year, their highlight event is the annual Open House. This past May, Dan and Kathy celebrated with a gala 20th anniversary gathering.

Congratulations to Dan Rouit for his election to the Trailblazers Hall of Fame. His work to give a home to the legendary machines raced by some of the biggest names in motorcycle racing history – many who are also Trailblazers Hall of Famers – is especially noteworthy to the club.

Tickets for the 68th annual Trailblazers banquet will go on sale after the first of the year on the club’s website at: www.trailblazersmc.com.

Contact info:

Dan and Kathy Rouit

Dan Rouit Flattrack Museum
309 West Rialto Street
Clovis, CA 93612-4331

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

BOB SIRKEGIAN SR ELECTED TO TRAILBLAZERS TO HALL OF FAME

The Trailblazers M.C. has named the third of its Hall of Fame inductees to be honored at its 68th annual banquet to be held in Carson, CA. on April 14, 2012. Joining the two previously named inductees—Jim McMurren and Eddie Lawson—Bob Sirkegian Sr. will be one of the two Posthumous awards in the next Hall of Fame class.

Sirkegian was born May 19, 1898 in Fresno, CA. He began riding in 1912 and was soon racing dirt track and board track racing. He also eventually became an Indian Motocycle dealer in Fresno. He was initially one of eleven board trackers riding for Indian, and later also rode for Harley-Davidson, Super X and many other factories. His AMA Life Member number was 31.

In 1921 he moved to San Diego to open another Indian dealership, while continuing his racing on board tracks and dirt oval tracks throughout the USA until 1929. He also became the first USA distributor for J.A.P. Speedway Motorcycles and began promoting weekly Class A Speedway races at Balboa Stadium in San Diego. In 1924 he took on Guy Urquhart as his partner at the motorcycle dealership.

In 1938 he sold his half of the partnership to Urquhart, married and moved to Nutley, NJ. At the request of the Indian factory he opened the largest Indian dealership on the east coast. Still a J.A.P. distributor he was now promoting Speedway racing 3 times a week on the east coast. This led to the creation of a West Coast-East Coast Match Race Series, which included legendary Speedway star Sprouts Elder, one of Bob’s friends from his hometown of Fresno.

In 1946, Sirkegian sold his east coast motorcycle dealership and moved back to the Los Angeles area where he and his younger brother Al opened up another Indian dealership known as Sirkegian Bros. They sold Indian, Mustang, Cushman and Evinrude Outboards, and later added Triumph and Ariel Motorcycles.

Upon Bob’s return to the west coast he became reacquainted with A.F. Van Order, Floyd Clymer and others in the Trailblazers and began attending the annual banquets, as well as providing some financial support when asked in order the keep banquets going.

In 1948 Bob built a a TT track called Sirkegian Stadium and promoted races there, as well as at another track called Mint Canyon which was located on another of his brothers’ property. In 1950 Sirkegian began promoting motorcycle road races and drag races at the Santa Ana Blimp Base

In 1951 and ’54, Sirkegian Bros. was the second highest selling dealer for Triumph and Ariel motorcycles in the Western USA. In 1952 and ’53, they were the highest selling Triumph and Ariel dealer in the Western USA. In ’53, Bob bought out his brother Al and became sole owner of the dealership. He also bought out Hollywood Motors, which sold BSA,

In 1955 Bob started selling BMW, NSU and BSA in his Los Angeles store after closing the Hollywood store. Then in 1957 he moved the business to Monrovia selling BMW, NSU, BSA and Harley-Davidson.

Bob Sirkegian Sr passed away at home on May 31, 1960, leaving his wife Ruby and two sons, Bob Junior and Douglas.

For more information log onto www.trailblazersmc.com.

Monday, August 15, 2011

EDDIE LAWSON NAMED TO TRAILBLAZERS HALL OF FAME

The Trailblazers M.C. have named Eddie Lawson as the second of the 2012 Hall of Fame inductees to be honored at the 68th annual banquet next April. Additional inductees will be announced in the near future.

Eddie Lawson will go down in history as one the greatest motorcycle road racers of all time. Lawson won the 500cc World Championship four times during the 1980s. When he retired from GP racing in the early 1990s, he ranked third on the all-time 500cc Grand Prix wins list with 31 victories. In addition to his international accomplishments, Lawson was equally successful on the domestic front. The Californian won the AMA Superbike Series twice (1981 and 1982) and the AMA 250 Grand Prix Series in 1980 and 1981. When inducted into the Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 1999, Lawson was the only rider to ever win the AMA Superbike and 250GP titles during his career. Lawson also won the Daytona 200, the first time during the prime of his racing career in 1986, then again in 1993 when he returned to the event after retiring from full-time motorcycle racing.

Lawson was born in Upland, California, on March 11, 1958. He grew up around motorcycles. Both his father and grandfather raced. Some of Lawson’s earliest memories are of going out to the desert races with his father. Lawson started riding an 80cc Yamaha when was 7 years old, having to hold the nearly full-sized bike up on his tiptoes when he came to a stop. By the time he was 12, Lawson was racing the local Southern California dirt track circuit. "We rode mainly at tracks like Corona and Ascot. I didn’t do very well for the first couple of years," admitted Lawson. "I just sort of rode around cautiously trying to not fall off my little 90cc Kawasaki Green Streak." It didn’t take Lawson long to get over his timidity. He quickly became one of the fastest young amateurs in Southern California during the early 1970s heyday of dirt track competition. Besides dirt track racing, Lawson also began to hit the local road races after his grandfather bought him a 50cc Italjet. He later graduated to a Yamaha RD350. This road racing experience would later prove to be very valuable for Lawson.

Lawson obtained his AMA expert license in 1978. He was riding Shell Thuett Yamahas, which were very fast for Yamaha dirt trackers, but was no match for the Harley-Davidsons that dominated dirt track racing. Lawson did manage to do decently on TT tracks. His best finish of his rookie expert season was fifth in the TT national at Santa Fe Speedway near Chicago. By 1979, it was becoming clear that Lawson was fighting an uphill battle on the dirt tracks, while just the opposite was happening at the road races. At 20, Lawson was already considered one of the top road racers in West Coast club racing. In 1979, he proved that he was a force to be reckoned with when he finished second to a young Freddie Spencer in the AMA 250 Grand Prix national at Sears Point Raceway in Sonoma, California. Lawson finished the season as the second-ranked rider behind Spencer in the AMA 250 GP series. While doing a made-for-television Superbikes event late in 1979, Lawson was invited to a Superbike tryout at Willow Springs Raceway by Kawasaki. Lawson set fast time in the tryout and was offered the ride. "It was really pretty fun to ride those old 1000cc Superbikes," Lawson recalls. "They were pretty heavy and had a lot of power and with the wide handlebars you could actually ride them a lot like a flat tracker, power-sliding out of the corners and everything." It did not take long for Lawson to get used to racing Superbikes. Lawson won his first Superbike national at Talladega, Alabama, in April of 1980. That season saw some epic battles between Lawson, Freddie Spencer and Wes Cooley. The season ended with Cooley winning the title in a controversial manner, with protests and counter-protests being filed between the Kawasaki and Suzuki Superbike teams. Cooley had to wait two months after the season to finally be awarded the championship. The same season, Lawson dominated the AMA 250 Grand Prix Series.

The Superbike controversy at the end of 1980 just made Lawson more determined. He came back in 1981 and won the title after another great year of battling Honda and its top rider, Freddie Spencer. The Lawson/Spencer rivalry would go down as one of the best in the history of Superbike racing. During this period, AMA Superbike racing really came into prominence and started to replace the Formula One class in importance. Lawson again won the 250GP title in ’81. Lawson’s ’80 and ’81 championships marked the only times that Kawasaki would win the AMA 250 Grand Prix titles. Lawson's last full season of racing in the U.S. was 1982. Again, Lawson and Kawasaki held off a serious challenge from Honda, that year with Mike Baldwin, who finished second in the series. Lawson accepted an offer from Yamaha to contest the 500cc World Championship for the 1983 season. Before he left for world championship battles, Lawson donned his steel shoe one last time and competed in the Houston Astrodome TT AMA Grand National, where he finished sixth. Lawson spent his first GP season learning the tracks and how to live outside of the U.S. for the first time in his life. Lawson looks back on the ’83 season as the most trying of his career. "I was away from home for the first time, I wasn’t having that much success and at times I wondered what I had gotten myself into," Lawson recalls. The 1984 season changed all that. Lawson began winning and getting used to his surroundings. He won the 1984 world championship. It would mark the first of four world titles Lawson would go on to win (1984, ’86, ’88 and ’89). By the time Lawson retired from GP racing after the 1992 season, he had won a total of 31 world championship races, which placed him third all-time in the 500cc class.

Lawson won the prestigious Suzuka Eight Hour race in Japan in 1990 with teammate Tadahiko Taira. After retiring from full-time motorcycle racing, Lawson came back to race in the Daytona 200 in 1993. He won in a spectacular last-lap duel with Scott Russell, marking a triumphant return and his second Daytona 200 victory. He raced at Daytona one more time in 1994 and finished third. Lawson continued racing in Indy Cars in the mid-1990s after his motorcycle- racing career. His progress through the Indy Car ranks was such that several auto racing publications cited Lawson as the top up-and-coming driver of the circuit. Unfortunately, the team that Lawson drove for was under-funded and was forced to field uncompetitive machinery and Lawson eventually left the sport. When inducted in 1999, Lawson was enjoying retirement living in Lake Havasu, Arizona, spending a lot of time on the lake and racing shifter go-karts with friend and fellow Hall of Fame member Wayne Rainey for fun.

Story courtesy of AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

JIM MCMURREN ELECTED TO TRAILBLAZERS HALL OF FAME

The Trailblazers Motorcycle Club has announced that Jim McMurren is itsnewest Hall of Fame inductee. McMurren, who lives in Nestor, CA, competed inmotorcycle roadracing, TT, 1/2-Miles and Miles, but it was Short Track that heenjoyed the most. Once they earned their AMA Expert racing licenses, Jim andhis lifelong friend Sid Carson, made Short Track racing the center piece of theirracing careers. Jim and Sid were true professionals, racing where the moneywas, rather than worry about chasing the AMA points at National Championshipevents. Every spring from the mid-1960s into the 70s, Jim and Sid would leavetheir homes in the San Diego area behind and move to Chicago for the summerto race motorcycles in the Midwest.

While there was racing going on all around them, every Wednesday night Jimwas racing the weekly Short Track races at Santa Fe Park on the southeast sideof Chicago. It was there that he learned the ropes of the sport against some ofthe sport’s greatest Flat Track racers, including Neil Keen, Gary Nixon, Fred Nix,Dick Mann, Darrel Dovel and many more. McMurren was ranked 3rd in the nationin short track racing in 1967, and 2nd in 1969.

In the off-season Jim and Sid would return every year back to San Diego,where they have been partners in a crane operating business dating back the60s. After his professional racing career was over, Jim continued to race localvintage events on his famous “Number 11” Harley-Davidson Sprint. And evenwhen health issues prevented him from racing, he was seen as late as April inattendance at the Wayne Hosaka Memorial race at Perris, CA.

McMurren and other Trailblazers Hall of Fame inductees yet to be named will behonored at the 68th annual Trailblazers banquet at the Carson Center in Carson,
CA on Saturday, April 14, 2012.

For more information, log onto the club’s website at: www.trailblazersmc.com oron Facebook.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

2011 Banquet News


At the conclusion of this year's banquet, all Trailblazers Hall of Famers in attendance were invited to take the stage for a group photo.

580 ATTEND 67TH ANNUAL TRAILBLAZERS BANQUET

A capacity crowd of 580 was on hand Saturday, April 9th at the Carson Center in Carson, CA for the 67th annual Trailblazers banquet. The day started with a great showing for the Tom Cates Memorial Bike Show with 60 motorcycles entered, a record according to show director Tom White. Then, once inside the banquet room, it was time to enjoy a great dinner plus a wine toast to member Cindy Rutherford to give support to her personal battle with cancer this past year.

Next came the annual Trailblazers Hall of Fame inductions for 2011. This year's inductees included: Jerry Branch, Tim Hart, Paul Hunt, the Love Brothers (Bill and Richard), Peter Starr and Joe Parkhurst. And last, but not least, came the awarding of the Trailblazers top prize, the Dick Hammer Award, this year to 1963 Daytona 200 winner Ralph White.

In the next month, the Trailblazers board of Directors will meet to finalize the date of the 2012 banquet, so check back for those details.

We look forward to seeing you all next year for the 68th annual banquet!


FORMER TRAILBLAZERS PRESIDENT MAX BUBECK DEAD AT 93

Sadness did hover over the Trailblazers banquet with the news only the day before of the passing of former Trailblazers president Max Bubeck. Max, who in his racing days, had won the grueling Greenhorn Enduro among his many victories, is credited with reviving the Trailblazers banquet back in the 1970s when then-president Floyd Clymer had passed away. There were a few years where no banquet was held until Max urged the group to begin again the annual tradition which continues today. Godspeed Max.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

RALPH WHITE NAMED TRAILBLAZERS 2011 DICK HAMMER AWARD RECIPIENT

At a recent meeting of the Trailblazers Board of Directors, motorcycle racing legend Ralph White was unanimously chosen as this year’s recipient of the Dick Hammer Award, the club’s top honors. He will be formally recognized at the 67th annual Trailblazers banquet at the Carson Center in Carson, CA on Saturday, April 9th.

Bio on Ralph White courtesy of AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame.

Photo by Walt Mahony/Mahony Photos

Ralph White was a leading AMA Grand National racer during the 1960s. White won four AMA nationals during his 12-year professional racing career, including a victory at the
prestigious Daytona 200 in 1963. While he was known primarily as a road racer, he proved his versatility by winning the most coveted race in AMA Grand National dirt-track racing – the Springfield (Ill.) Mile in 1965. During his career White was a factory rider for Harley-Davidson, Matchless, Yamaha and Kawasaki.

White was born in San Diego on March 7, 1935. His father was a Naval reservist and was called to service during World War II. White was 6 years old and living on a Navy base in Hawaii during the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. “It was early in the morning and my parents were still in bed,” recalls White. “I went down stairs to get something for my sister and was halfway up the stairs on the way back when the first bombs hits. It knocked me off my feet. I ran into my parents’ bedroom, my dad, still in bed, said it was probably just some training exercises. I looked out the window and told him that the planes had red spots on them. He jumped out of bed and quickly reported for duty. We didn’t see him for two days.”

Back home in San Diego in the mid-1950s, White graduated from high school and split time between working, going to college and having fun with his new-found love – motorcycling. By the late 1950s he began racing a Harley-Davidson K-model at local field meets and later took up scrambles riding for A.J. Lewis’ Matchless dealership in El Cajon and winning a district scrambles championship. It was during this time that he and other San Diego notables Brad Andres and Cal Rayborn learned the art of road racing by practicing on an old local airstrip. All three would go on to be recognized as top road racers of their day.

Former Daytona 200 winner and Harley-Davidson dealer Floyd Emde helped White get a ride with Leonard Andres with support from Harley-Davidson. In 1961, his rookie expert season, White showed great promise. He took a surprising third at the Laconia (N.H.) Classic road race and finished the season tied for ninth with Al Gunter in the AMA Grand National standings.
The 1962 campaign was even more successful for White. He not only matched his previous year’s finish at Laconia, he also earned a third-place finish in the Daytona 200. White climbed to fifth in the standings that year. His greatest accomplishment came in 1963 when he was victorious in the Daytona 200.

White rode that week with a broken left wrist and had to wear a bulky leather brace. It was the first year bikes were allowed to run with fairings, and White won the pole for the 200 at a record 78.80 mph. (This was on the 2-mile infield road course that didn't include Daytona International Speedway’s high-bank turns). In the race, White’s chances of victory seemed lost on lap 24 when he crashed. Fortunately White quickly got his bike back in the fray and stayed in the top five. As the 200-miler progressed, each leader--Roger Reiman, Tony Murguia and eventually Dick Hammer--all had problems and dropped out. In a race of attrition (only 18 of the 65 starters finished) White found himself with a comfortable lead, ultimately winning by a lap and a half over Triumph’s Larry Williamson. “I was the last man standing,” White said of his Daytona win.

He led the 1963 championship point standings through mid-season and might well have won the title, but for crashing on a wet road course in practice for a national at Windber, Pa., and suffering a badly injured left knee. Ralp was forced to miss the Windber race and then raced injured for a month afterwards, resulting in poor finishes. Despite all of this, White still earned third in the final championship standings, only 10 points behind Dick Mann. That would prove to be White’s highest finish in the championships.

1964 was the last year for White on the Harley-Davidson racing team. It was a solid year – four podium finishes fifth in the championships - but he earned no victories. By this time, he had started a business, and work was taking more of his time. He asked Harley-Davidson to fly him to the races, and they declined. That opened the way for White to work out a unique deal for the 1965 season in which he became a factory rider for Yamaha in the then non-national Lightweight support class at the road races (later called 250 Grand Prix) and rode for Bob Hansen’s Matchless team in the nationals. “Yamaha flew me to the races, paid all my expenses, plus gave me $500 salary per race to run in the 250 class,” White remembers. “I split the purse with Hansen in the nationals. I remember when I won the road race in Des Moines, Iowa, I split the $750 purse with Hansen, so not much was left.” 1965 turned out to be the most successful year for White in terms of wins. He was victorious at the new Loudon (N.H.) road course, which replaced the old Laconia circuit, the aforementioned Des Moines road race and earned his only dirt track national victory – a great one – the Springfield Mile. The Loudon win was interesting in that White raced at the regular Friday night program at Ascot Park in Gardena, Calif., winning there and then hopping on a midnight flight to Boston. Fellow racer Dan Haaby picked him up from the airport, but the two didn’t make it to Loudon in time for Saturday’s practice. With just a single Sunday morning practice session, White won his heat race and the pole, and then went on to win the race on a Matchless. Less than six months after being dumped by Harley, White remembers a satisfying exchange with his former boss on the podium at Loudon. “Walter Davidson came up to me and said (jokingly), ‘You sonofabitch. We’ve (Harley’s racing team) been here since Wednesday and you come in here on Sunday and steal this race away from us.’ It was one of those times when it seemed I could do no wrong.”

His Springfield Mile win was equally impressive. It had rained hard the night before the race and helicopters had to be brought out to fly over the track to dry it enough so that cars could get on the mile oval and wheel pack the surface. Riding a Gary Bray-tuned BSA at Springfield, White remembers being pretty disappointed after qualifying. He had just barely made the race and would be forced to start near the back of the field. As it turned out the ’65 race was one of the true great Springfield Miles. Most of the field raced in tight formation nearly the entire race.

White remembered leading one lap and being tenth the next. The lead changed 31 times during the race. On the final lap Bart Markel was leading, but slipped off the racing line going around a lapped rider, and White took the lead on the back straight. “I didn’t want to lead that early,” White recalls. “I figured Markel would be coming back real fast.” Bart did gather his momentum with Gary Nixon right behind him-- and the two drafted White coming out of the last turn. But White held on to win over Markel by a half-wheel length. It was a Springfield classic.

After winning a career-best three Nationals, White was only able to finish sixth in the championships due to inconsistent finishes. By 1966 his results began to fall off. That year he earned five top-10 finishes (a fourth at Daytona was his best) and was ninth in the final standings. It proved to be the final time he would finish ranked in the top 10 after six straight seasons of doing so.

During the late-1960s White raced primarily in West Coast Nationals. He experienced a brief resurgence in 1971 when his old friend Bob Hansen called him to race a factory Kawasaki triple in AMA national road races. White showed that he still had the skills to be competitive by earning a podium finish (third) at Road Atlanta and a fourth at Talladega.

Ralph White retired from pro racing after the 1972 season. He was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 2001. At the time he had homes in Southern California and Arizona and still ran his construction equipment business.

Monday, January 10, 2011

WAYNE HOSAKA 3/10/48 – 1/16/11

MAKING THE MOST OF WHAT YOU HAVE
By Don Emde

The motorcycle world was saddened to learn of the passing of Wayne Hosaka on Sunday, January 16th. He is known best to motorcycle enthusiasts as a former pro racer on the AMA Class C circuit in the 1970s, and later as a sponsor and supporter of the sport through his Flattrack.com website. In his later years Wayne (or “ Hos” as he was known to some) became a talented artist, taught girls how to play basketball, enjoyed gardening and played the harmonica.

“ But wait!” you say. “ Wasn’ t he paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair?” The answer is yes. Wayne’ s motorcycle racing career came to an abrupt halt only weeks after he had qualified for the main and finished 8th in the National at the 1971 season-opening Short Track race at the Houston Astrodome. Next up was a daytime Flattrack event at Ascot Park where he suffered a broken neck in a crash in the Semi, permanently losing most of the feeling in his body from the neck down.

Wayne Noboru Hosaka was born on March 10, 1948. He was raised in the San Diego area and at a young age developed an interest in art and motorsports. His Uncle Mits Hosaka had a motorcycle business and was constantly doing speed work on motorcycles, go-karts and about anything else with an engine in it. When Wayne was about 6 years old, he and his cousin Hito got first into go-karts, and next into motorcycles.

Wayne quickly rose up through the ranks in AMA District 38 Amateur TT racing, first on a 100cc Hodaka and, later, larger Bultacos and other brands. As a former racer in the area myself, I can attest that if you wanted to win races in San Diego in the late-1960s, you had to get the best of Wayne Hosaka, which was no easy task. In a word, Wayne was just “ fast” on any motorcycle he rode.

Wayne, who was a new father at the time he was injured, was focused then on a career as a motorcycle racer. But the Ascot crash changed everything and he looked for things he could do within the scope of his limitations. Eventually he became employed working on computers, using voice command software and limited hand motions. (BELOW:
Wayne at speed on his Don Vesco-sponsored BSA 650 in 1970.)

In the early 1990s, Wayne became an early user of the World Wide Web and in 1995 created a website for the motorcycle Flattrack community called Flattrack.com. The website and forum he created quickly became a must-read for everyone interested and involved in Flattrack racing. In a recent interview, Wayne said, “ My original mission statement was to provide a place for Flattrack enthusiasts to share information on racing, equipment, schedules, etc. I did not fully realize the impact it would have on the sport as an “ Open Forum.” It gives promoters, riders and team owners a place to discuss issues and help establish rules and regulations.”

Along the way, Wayne’ s father, himself a talented artist, encouraged Wayne to get back into art, which he had enjoyed as far back as Elementary school. But the hobby now required him to paint using a mouth stick for a brush for detail work, with some use of his left hand for broad strokes. In 2004 he became a member of the Association of Mouth and Foot Painting Artists and through the years produced many amazing pieces of art, some, but not all, motorcycle related.

Wayne remained very busy to the end. He got involved as a basketball coach for girls, loved to listen to Blues and would entertain friends at parties playing his harmonica. He did some gardening and spent time with his three grandchildren.

Mia Larcom, one of Wayne’ s assistants with Flattrack.com website, wrote the following on the website the day after Wayne’ s passing: “ On January 16, 2011, Wayne crossed the final checkers. His life, his artwork, and his never ending search for peace and humanity were an inspiration to all who knew him. This site was his gift to the flattrack community. HE was a gift to the EARTH. Hos will be missed, but never forgotten. Thanks Wayne.”

Wayne Hosaka was inducted into the Trailblazers Hall of Fame in 2005. He is survived by his mother, sister Marsha, son Wayne Hosaka, Jr. and three grandchildren. Following the passing in 2004 of Carol, his wife of 24 years, Wayne was fortunate to have the support of Kathleen Fabry as his primary care giver.

Godspeed Wayne.

Note: Wayne Hosaka Services:

There will be a Memorial Service for Wayne Hosaka on Jan. 29 @ 2pm at Christ Unity Church, 311 Highland Ave, El Cajon, CA. Immediately following will be a Jam Session at the Down Town Cafe, 185 East Main, El Cajon, CA


1960s Southern California race supporter Pete Pistone (in the back) with his racing team that included Wayne on the right (4), and Wayne’ s lifelong friend Sal Paluso (123R).

Don Emde (57x) chases Wayne at South Bay Speedway in San Diego in 1968.

Hosaka leading TT legend Skip Van Leeuwen at an Ascot Park TT in 1970. Mahony photo.

Wayne (55x) battles Terry Sage (70z) and Eddie Mulder at the Houston Astrodome Short Track in 1971. Wayne finished a career-best 8th place in the National. Mahony photo.

Wayne paints a photo of racer Digger Helm.

Here is a painting Wayne did of famed racer Al Gunter.

A Wayne Hosaka painting of Neil Keen.