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Kenny Roberts


Hugh Janus

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“If it hadn’t been for motorcycle racing, I’d have been just another guy in a rusty pickup truck on his way home from work in the almond groves.”
“If it hadn’t been for motorcycle racing, I’d have been just another guy in a rusty pickup truck on his way home from work in the almond groves.” (Cycle World Archives/)

It is a comforting fiction of our settled life that intelligence must be identified in early childhood and cultivated by professional educators to produce the leaders and creators of the future. Yet there are schools without classrooms that focus ­intelligence just as effectively.

For Kenny Roberts, three-time world champion in 500cc Grand Prix roadracing, that focus came from riding.

“If it hadn’t been for motorcycle racing, I’d have been just another guy in a rusty pickup truck on his way home from work in the almond groves,” he once told me.

If you get to know Roberts even a little bit, you quickly discover he has no use for the human politics of playing the hero. He can be funny, irritable, annoying, or deliberately insulting in quick succession. Yet the whole time you feel his wit and intelligence. During his racing career with Yamaha team manager (and former 250 world champion) Kel Carruthers, the two often addressed each other as “Asshole” and “Dummy.” The last time I saw him, he looked at me with mock disbelief and said, “Are you even still alive?”

Yet when he went to Europe to contest the Grands Prix, he rejected the disconnect between the pomp of the FIM officials, clad in blue blazers and self-importance, and the almost nonexistence of significant prize money, or even basic rider safety, in the “highest form” of roadracing. When presented with a silver bowl at an early prize-giving after a Grand Prix win, he handed it back, saying: “Here, you keep this. Maybe you can sell it,” implying that such a sale might yield funds for more than the usual “tip” that was rider prize money 42 years ago.

Roberts became AMA national champion in 1973—his second season in the series. It took him three weeks to get used to the high speeds in roadracing.
Roberts became AMA national champion in 1973—his second season in the series. It took him three weeks to get used to the high speeds in roadracing. (Cycle World Archives/)

Other riders in the past who had openly criticized the sanctioning body’s actions had been “disciplined”—by license suspension. Roberts had two weapons that would ultimately give him power over the men in blue: 1) the strength that comes from not caring; he’d already been the US national champion and knew the FIM wasn’t the only game in town; and 2) he had become “the show” in GP racing, bringing his dirt-track-originated riding style of steering the rear wheel with the throttle to a fast-expanding and delighted audience.

Racetracks used by MotoGP today, with gravel runoff areas and Airfence, did not exist then. Many circuits were still lined with the steel Armco barriers once demanded by F1. Others were bordered by giant trees, whose trunks were “pro­tected” by a few hay bales. Provisions for rider safety and treatment after injury were thin. Roberts, determined to change such things, did not shut up on command.

Roberts with other top riders at the Trans-Atlantic Match Races, where up in the Goodyear truck he discovered the winning power of the brain.
Roberts with other top riders at the Trans-Atlantic Match Races, where up in the Goodyear truck he discovered the winning power of the brain. (Cycle World Archives/)

When Cycle magazine editor Cook Neilson first interviewed Roberts, he said: “I expected to find some quick-wrist kid who just gets out there and skids ‘er around. Instead, I found…an intellectual of motorcycle racing who could speak clearly about exactly what he was doing and how it worked.”

In 1980, when I went to interview Roberts at his home in Modesto, ­California, I sat a moment in my rental car, considering the tools of my trade—notebook and tape recorder. I left them on the seat. What I wanted was a conversation.

Once we were settled in a quiet room, I asked him, “How long were you in top-level motorcycle racing before you realized you were more intelligent than others around you?”

Then he told me the most ­remark­able things. Of being ­desperate at the 1974 English Trans-Atlantic Match races with a third-best practice time and no idea of how to fix it. He was already US national champion then. Needing to be alone, he made a hidden space in the Goodyear truck. After a time, he found he could play back in his mind, “almost like frame by frame,” what his British rivals were doing. Gradually—over a period of three hours—he came to understand what they knew how to do that he did not. He understood why it was working, and how he could do better.

If you can’t steer it with the front, steer it with the rear. He’d soon make throttle steering work just as well on pavement.
If you can’t steer it with the front, steer it with the rear. He’d soon make throttle steering work just as well on pavement. (Cycle World Archives/)

Here an essential point must be made. It is one thing to understand and know what you must do. It is quite another to make it work—to invisibly reweave that understanding into your style and turn it into lap time. Many a rider, tempted by the beginner syndrome of rushing corners, has been told how to do better. A few have been able to make it work in practice, but in the rush of racing itself have reverted to their own natural style and slowed back down. This list includes some impor­tant champions. But hardly any are able to race from sheet music that they’ve just written.

Wayne Rainey (right, with Roberts in leathers) won three 500cc world championships with the man from Modesto’s team
Wayne Rainey (right, with Roberts in leathers) won three 500cc world championships with the man from Modesto’s team (Cycle World Archives/)

Roberts came out of the truck, Carruthers put the chosen tires on the bike, and in three laps he was on the lap record.

“That was the first time in my life that I realized that lap times were coming from my brain and not from my wrist.”

Because it had worked so well, he went back up in the truck again.

When the FIM refused to budge on operational and organizational changes that had been urgently needed for years, Roberts joined forces with Manchester Guardian motorsports writer Barry Coleman to create a new and forward-thinking racing organization—the World Series. As the FIM blustered, Roberts and company busily set about signing up racetracks and sponsors.

Life never becomes simpler. Roberts would be second to Jack Middlelburg this day at Silverstone in 1981, and Marco Lucchinelli (Suzuki) would be champion that year.
Life never becomes simpler. Roberts would be second to Jack Middlelburg this day at Silverstone in 1981, and Marco Lucchinelli (Suzuki) would be champion that year. (Getty Images/)

I suspect in hindsight that the FIM then realized that motorcycle GP racing had become a valuable property, and that powerful people who knew this might actually take it from them.

Roberts was a plausible threat because in every race he was showing his willingness to put everything into success. He had taken on and defeated media sensation and 1976-77 500cc World Champion Barry Sheene, the fast-talking Cockney who had taken the microphones so often shoved in his face and by his fast and witty repartee made GP bike racing into the most talked about of sports, and a favorite venue of the beautiful people.

In 1979, Roberts returned as 500cc champion after falling behind at the first race, Venezuela. Then he fought his way back—winning Austria, then coming second in Germany (shown here).
In 1979, Roberts returned as 500cc champion after falling behind at the first race, Venezuela. Then he fought his way back—winning Austria, then coming second in Germany (shown here). (Cycle World Archives /)

Faced with these threats from the future, the FIM released its fixation on 1920s attitudes and made changes. Roberts accomplished that by throwing all the power that success in racing had given him into forcing the FIM to give riders their share. Like pitching it into a corner and trusting the front will hold.

Those who know him know that when he doesn’t like the company, he will say breathtakingly un-PC things that some folk just can’t accept. I’ve seen it. When a particularly tiresome hanger-on at Laguna one year made a bore of himself, Roberts switched to what I think of as “Modesto mode,” and the unwanted person melted away.

Three races, three wins. This is May 1980, Paul Ricard Circuit in the south of France. Roberts stands with his crew—Nobby Clark on his right, and Kel Carruthers and Trevor Tilbury on his left.
Three races, three wins. This is May 1980, Paul Ricard Circuit in the south of France. Roberts stands with his crew—Nobby Clark on his right, and Kel Carruthers and Trevor Tilbury on his left. (Getty Images/)

And if right-thinkers don’t like it? The air forces of the world face a similar problem—which would they prefer? A smooth Kiwanis talker with good hair who can spearhead the bond drive? Or a pilot who has proved that when he goes up, enemy aircraft come down? In the first case, what you need is an actor. In the second, you need action.

After his retirement as a rider, at first Roberts ran a GP team of factory Yamahas. In the process, he attracted a group of get-it-done-today technical men whose ambition was to carry out the R&D that they felt was lacking. One of them was pipe-and-cylinder experimentalist Bud Aksland. Another was Mike Sinclair, and the third was the late Warren Willing.

It was natural that such an experienced and dissatisfied group would inevitably design its own GP bike—in this case, a two-stroke triple based on what looked like a loophole in the rules, a weight break.

Roberts as team manager, with Marlboro Team riders Eddie Lawson (left) and Wayne Rainey
Roberts as team manager, with Marlboro Team riders Eddie Lawson (left) and Wayne Rainey (Cycle World Archives/)

The details aren’t as important as the lesson, which is that total commitment and intelligence cannot unlock every door. Sometimes in life there is no substitute for state-of-the-art R&D resources that only the overdogs can deliver. After two redesigns, the KR triple set pole at the last race of the 500cc two-stroke formula. Then it was a mad race to build their own V-5 four-stroke for MotoGP, based on combustion-chamber insights from Rob Muzzy and finance from a Southeast Asian captain of industry, who by chance had been one of Roberts’ golf partners.

It was fun while it lasted, but as Aksland put it: “I don’t mind putting in an all-nighter now and then—that’s part of racing. But I don’t want to just live in a crisis.”

Roberts returns to the Indy Mile in 2009, with the “unrideable” TZ750-powered Yamaha on which he miraculously won in 1975. Yes, that’s Valentino Rossi (center) and Carruthers (left).
Roberts returns to the Indy Mile in 2009, with the “unrideable” TZ750-powered Yamaha on which he miraculously won in 1975. Yes, that’s Valentino Rossi (center) and Carruthers (left). (Brian J. Nelson/)

After the passage of time, Roberts can be forthright about things that were once most secret, revealing that racing success often had to begin with big gambles, like sawing off the steering head of an ill-­handling bike and welding it back at a different angle. (“How’s it look? OK? I’ll tack it there.”) Or stripping off the cylinders of a precious multi­million-dollar prototype and machining them to alter performance. Because Roberts knew on the track what was wrong, and with that knowledge he and Carruthers had done what needed doing. Experience, knowledge, intelligence, and willingness to commit to action now.

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