Lodi News-Sentinel

Flat-track motorcycle racing could be coming back into fashion

- By Charles Fleming

LOS ANGELES — Jared Mees squinted dubiously at the dirt motorcycle track.

“That ain’t no mile,” the Grand National champion and X Games gold medalist said.

Indeed, the short indoor course was a temporary track laid out by American Supercamp, a training academy that had come to Los Angeles with its techniques and teachers — including 2016 flat track champion Bryan Smith and seven-time national champion Chris Carr — as part of a broad effort to help get flat track racing back into public view.

Flat, or dirt, track racing was once the dominant motor sport in America, when daring men on twin-cylinder Harley-Davidson and Indian motorcycle­s went handlebar to handlebar on mile and half-mile dirt ovals before thousands of screaming fans.

But the sport began losing speed in the 1980s, eclipsed by rising enthusiasm for the wheelies and wild jumps in motocross and the high speeds and sleek machines of Grand Prix racing — which led manufactur­ers to concentrat­e their budgets on dirt bikes for off-road use and sport bikes for the street. Flat track was left in the dust.

Now a disparate group of promoters, investors, motorcycle companies and race veterans are hoping to restore luster to this American-made sport — and profit from doing so.

With new corporate sponsorshi­p, a cable TV deal, major investment­s by top manufactur­ers, revised racing classes, schedules and events, and a coincident­al wave of interest in vintage machines, flat track may be headed back toward the mainstream.

“The history of American motorcycle racing is the history of dirt racing,” said motorcycle historian Paul D’Orleans, creator of the Vintagent website and co-author of “Cafe Racers: Speed, Style and Ton-Up Culture.” “This is a whole new era.”

Spectators new to the sport are often shocked by the visceral action, which features racers traveling at speeds up to 135 miles per hour down the straightaw­ays before sliding at 90 mph, inches apart, through the turns.

“It’s far more exciting to watch than car racing,” D’Orleans said, “partly because it’s clearly so much more dangerous.”

The sport’s principal steward is American Flat Track, a division of AMA Pro Racing, which is a subsidiary of Daytona Motorsport­s Group. (The companies are not affiliated with the nonprofit American Motorcycli­st Associatio­n, the industry lobbying group also known as the AMA.) DMG also manages motocross and hill climb events.

Michael Lock, chief executive of AMA Pro Racing, has overseen the overhaul of AMA Flat Track.

Starting with the 2017 racing season, all 18 U.S. races will be televised as part of a Thursday night package on NBC Sports Network. Many of the events will take place at horse racetracks, part of an effort to upgrade the facilities and attract new fans.

The former GNC 1 and GNC 2 racing classes, which contained a complex set of rules defining what machines were qualified to race, have been simplified to AFT Twins and AFT Singles. That has created new interest in manufactur­ers, and has revived a historical rivalry.

Last year, Indian Motorcycle unveiled a flat track racing version of its 750cc Scout V-twin motorcycle. In September, the company took the new FTR750 to the famed Santa Rosa Mile in California and went head to head with former archenemy Harley.

“Flat track and the Harley-Indian wars were a huge part of our history, but a lot of people don’t know we’re back as a serious competitor,” said Indian’s marketing director, Reid Wilson. “Through flat track and competing directly with Harley, we hope to reintroduc­e Indian to a lot of the brand.” Harley welcomed the competitio­n. “We love flat track racing and we’ve been doing it longer than anybody,” said company spokesman Matt King. “Indian is just another player that we have to step up and compete with, but I think they are going to be a credible competitor.”

Indian finished seventh at Santa Rosa, but announced after the race that it had hired the day’s top three racers — Harley riders Mees and Brad Baker, and Kawasaki’s Smith — to man its 2017 race team.

Industry boosters welcome the coming battle.

“There’s nothing bigger than Harley-Davidson, and there is no bigger competitor than Indian,” said Richard Varner, a board member of Petersen Automotive Museum in LA and the chief financial officer for the motorcycle road racing organizati­on MotoAmeric­a. “This rivalry is really exciting.”

There will be less historic but equally intense rivalry in the AFT Singles class, which will draw riders on machines made by Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki, Suzuki and KTM.

But equally key to flat track’s future is television. Already popular globally and among hardcore fans — thanks in part to the sport’s availabili­ty on the FansChoice online app — AMA Flat Track’s new deal with NBCSN could attract a prime-time audience.

“To be back on a mainstream TV channel is huge,” Varner said. “It gives the sport real credibilit­y, and it gives it more access.”

“It’s critical,” said Gavin Trippe, a motorcycle industry veteran who has promoted racing since the 1970s. “Sponsorshi­p, factory teams and TV are what build the sport.”

Flat track supporters are hoping to attract younger viewers. They may capitalize on a parallel motorcycle movement already taking place, independen­t of the race scene.

Millennial motorcycle builders, artisans and promoters have embraced a retro look in styling of their bikes and their attire that hearkens back to flat track’s glory days.

Racers from other discipline­s are exploring flat track too. Grand Prix champions Valentino Rossi and Marc Marquez both use flat track ovals to hone their technique. Motocross giants Jeremy McGrath and Ryan Villopoto were recently spotted roaring around the Perris course outside LA, home of the Southern California Flat Track Associatio­n.

This has inspired major manufactur­ers to offer new vintage-looking motorcycle­s, like Indian’s Scouts, Ducati’s Scramblers, BMW’s R nine Ts, Yamaha’s SCR950s and Triumph’s Bonneville­s.

Some of these bikers have shown up at non-American Flat Track events, like Brian Bell’s annual IV League Flat Track race at the historic Del Mar horse track near San Diego.

Bell’s experience is a snapshot of the flat track revival. His first event as a promoter, in late 2014, was at an exposition center in Imperial Valley that drew 39 racers and 300 spectators. His second event, held four months later at Del Mar, hosted 390 riders and a crowd of 3,000.

“Flat track was not nearly what it is now when we started,” Bell said. “It was barren. Now there are events all over.”

Sometimes flat track racing can be fatal. Two riders died on the 2016 circuit — on the same day. GNC2 racers Charlotte Kainz, 20, and Kyle McGrane, 17, were killed in separate accidents, in different races, at different points on the Santa Rosa Mile course, on the last race day of the season. It was later determined that the racetrack would not be part of the 2017 schedule.

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 ?? MYUNG J. CHUN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Chris Carr, seven-time winner of the Grand National Championsh­ips, demonstrat­es race techniques as part of American Supercamp Motorcycle Technique School at the Industry Hills Expo Center in the City of Industry.
MYUNG J. CHUN/LOS ANGELES TIMES Chris Carr, seven-time winner of the Grand National Championsh­ips, demonstrat­es race techniques as part of American Supercamp Motorcycle Technique School at the Industry Hills Expo Center in the City of Industry.

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