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Croz & the Mountain

December 22, 2010 1 comment

Kim Newcombe – Love, Speed & Loss

November 28, 2010 Leave a comment

2009 NZ Classic Motorcycle Festival featuring Kevin Schwantz riding a Manx Norton, The Britten, Kim Newcombe’s Konig and Norton Cosworth motorcycles.

The documentary – Love, Speed & Loss (click here to view Part 1 of 3)

A documentary about motor-racer Kim Newcombe, who turned heads in the 70s on a König motorbike he developed and designed himself. He was killed racing in 1973 and posthumously came second in that year’s World 500cc Grand Prix. The film mixes interviews and underdog triumph on the track scenes, with Super 8 footage of family life on the circuit, and poignant wife-of-maverick reflections from his widow Janeen. Love, Speed and Loss won best documentary at the 2007 Qantas TV Awards and Air NZ Screen Awards for best documentary, directing, and editing.

source:  NZonscreen

1977 Bathurst – Ikujiro Takai

February 23, 2010 1 comment

Photo from Jim’s personal album

Categories: Motorcycling People

Warren Willing to Ride Demonstration Laps At Honda Broadford Bike Bonanza In Australia

February 20, 2010 Leave a comment

Motorcycling Australia (MA) is pleased to announce that 1976 Australian Unlimited Road Racing Champion, Warren Willing, will return to the track this Easter at the 2010 Honda Broadford Bike Bonanza (HBBB).

Willing, whose battles with friend and arch-rival, Gregg Hansford in the 1970s are still talked about, will cut demonstration laps on the special 3-cylinder Suzuki 350, built for him to contest the 1973 New Zealand International Season.

Photo Credit - Deejay51.com

The machine features a Steve Roberts chassis and is now owned by Darwin enthusiast Peter Shires.  Apart from a handful of demonstration laps at the inaugural Phillip Island Grand Prix in 1989, Willing has not been aboard a racing motorcycle since a serious accident at the North West 200 in Ireland in May 1979. Willing sustained multiple leg injuries which required many operations and years of rehabilitation and recovery.

Although his stellar career as a rider was over, Willing never lost his appetite for competition, carving a new career as a Team Manager and Technician.  In his role as head of the Australian Marlboro Yamaha Team, Willing gave young Queenslander Mick Doohan his big break on the highly successful Yamaha Superbikes.  Doohan’s remarkable year in 1988 led to him signing for Honda and 1989 and going on to win five World 500cc Titles.

Willing then moved on to the international scene, acting as technician with the Kenny Roberts Yamaha squad and looking after Kevin Magee for the 1989 season.  He subsequently worked with Wayne Rainey, Luca Cadalora and Jean-Michel Bayle and became renowned as one of the best chassis and suspension workers in the business.

In a career which saw him work with the Suzuki and KTM Works Teams, and the private Roberts Squad, a highlight was winning the World 500cc Championship with Kenny Roberts Junior in 2000.

The HBBB will also feature demonstrations by US Motocross Champion Gary Jones, Enduro and Motocross star Pelle Granquist, and Honda’s first Australian Motocross Champion Brian Martin amongst others.

photo credit: vintagebike.co.uk

More information about the event is available on the MA website: http://www.ma.org.au/hbbb.

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Vale Greg Pretty

January 28, 2010 Leave a comment

Don Cox wrote it best:

Greg Pretty, the superstar of the 1979 national season, has died in a road accident in the Adelaide Hills.

Pretty, 54, an airline pilot from Enfield (Adelaide), was riding his Honda with a group of friends on Saturday, January 16. Another rider, travelling in the opposite direction, strayed onto Pretty’s side of the road and collided with him head on. Both riders died at the scene.

Thirty years ago, Greg Pretty was the hottest thing in Australian road-racing. The sight of him sliding both wheels of his Yamaha-Pitmans TZ750F in the speedbowl section of Adelaide International Raceway was one of the classic images of the era.

This from a guy who honed his riding skills in the Hills on a Honda 750, riding most Sundays in the Phoenix Motorcycle Club’s run from Eagle On The Hill to Lobethal.

He won the 250 Production race at Bathurst in 1976 and from 1977 began racking up wins in long-distance Production races, In 1978 Pretty won the South Australian round of the national championship on his personal Yamaha TZ750.

During the 1979 season, this chirpy 24-years-old construction worker with the Zapata moustache won the Australian Unlimited Road-Racing Championship, the Swann Insurance International Series (beating among others world 500 championship number four Dutchman Wil Hartog), the non-championship Indonesian GP and the Sugo Big Road Race in Japan. He also won the Adelaide Three-Hour and Perth Four-Hour Production races, and finished second in the Castrol Six-Hour, on a Yamaha XS1100.

Ten or 20 years later, such results would have attracted great interest overseas Instead, Pretty went to England as a private rider in 1980 and struggled. Greg competed in the 1980 Isle of Man TT. He only had the Yamaha 750, so he was only eligible for one race, the Classic 1300cc TT.

He said later: “You had to ride there with the right attitude, otherwise you’d get hurt. I had very little official practice to jet and gear the bike. Eighty riders started in the race and 32 finished. Two were killed and I finished 25th after riding the last half lap at 15 mph because the steering damper had broken. I was happy with that.”

Greg came home in 1981 and restarted his great partnership with Yamaha Pitmans’ team manager Mal Pitman. In two months Pretty won the Coca-Cola 800 and the Arai 500 on chain driven Yamaha XS11 Pitman built, and the and the Bathurst Unlimited Race on his favourite TZ750F. He reckoned Pitman has a special way of motivating him, with quotes such as:  “I’ve never seen such an old chook on a motorbike”.

Honda Australia hired Pretty to race Superbikes in 1982, but the combination never really gelled. Greg put his efforts into chasing his commercial pilot’s licence from that point – save for a brief comeback in 1985. He later took up club racing in a Porsche 911 and maintained a life-long passion for building and flying model aircraft.

Greg maintained contact with many of his racing mates over the years and even toyed with the idea of a comeback ride in last November’s Six-Hour race at Oran Park.

He’ll be sadly missed, not just as a true local legend but a terrific guy.

* Rhymes with “Betty”

In Greg’s own words … how he met Jim at Bathurst:

My first meeting with Jim was at the top end of Mountain straight at Bathurst in 1975. I had travelled to Bathurst with a great mate towing a new trailer (which contained my 900 Kawasaki) he had built which unfortunately gave us grief all the way from Adelaide causing me to miss all the practice sessions for the Easter event. My first lap on the bike(a 1974 Z1-A) was actually in the production race which saw me start at the very back of the field because I had no qualifying time. This was a bummer because I was trying to make up ground which resulted in me colliding into the rear of Jims Z1-B at the top of Mountain straight with Jim being catapulted into the grass off to the left side of the track. When we both got to our feet and looked around, Jim looked at me with a strange gaze of mixed emotion and said “You’re Greg Pretty aren’t you”? To which I simply and in a very embarrassed way replied ‘Yep.” I still don’t know how he knew me but from that moment on we were good mates. I felt so bad for him having cleaned him up the way I did but he showed no animosity toward me whatsoever, so I really liked him! Jim and I always had a good laugh together which was easy with his dry easy going sense of humour.  When it came to selecting a co-rider for myself in the 1979 6 hour, the choice was easy. I knew Jim was available, so I said to Malcolm Pitman, “what about Jim Budd”? Mal was totally agreeable, so Jim was approached and he happily agreed. He rode with me in an extremely accomplished manner to finish 2nd after he had recovered from a bad accident at Amaroo Park earlier in the year.