Point/Counterpoint by Ed Sorbo and Michael Gougis
(Eds. Note: Racers Ed Sorbo and Michael Gougis talk incessantly about motorcycle road racing on the phone and in podcasts. Apparently, that’s not enough, because they also exchange emails on the subject. We’ll publish some of their exchanges.)
Endurance Racing: What Happened?
Ed Sorbo:
In 1986 my friends in Hawaii and I pooled our resources, shipped a bike over to the mainland and raced in the WERA National Endurance Series as Team Hawaii. Our endeavors grew over the years to include Team Hawaii Too, seven 24-hour races and many four- and six-hour races mixed in with sprint races at shared events. In 1990 we were high enough in the National points that we were guaranteed a starting spot at each event. This was important because there was always a waiting list, the grids were full all season with 40 bikes lined up for a chance to charge around for hours on end.
Fast forward to now. What the hell happened?
Used to be it was easy to find someone who would share a bike so maybe rising bike costs are part of the problem. Used to be that you could crash your steel-framed bike numerous times, whack the bars back into alignment, get re-teched on pit lane and just keep racing. Used to be you could work on your bike during a red flag…
Michael Gougis:
Dude, it’s not even sharing a bike that’s the big problem. When I helped start the racing series at Chuckwalla, we incorporated a one-hour tag-team event. You could let your friend race his or her bike for their leg, then you could do your leg on your machine. The freakin’ races even had a small cash purse for the teams on the podium. The first race, you had to swap transponders. The ones after that, you didn’t even need to do that – just come into the pits, tag your teammate and they’d speed off.
Grids – miniscule.
I wrote the rules for an endurance race Shandra Crawford staged at Willow back in 2010. It was just a four-hour.
Grids – miniscule.
I’ve got one thought as to what happened. With the rising average age of racers, fewer were willing to put in the effort of riding that long at a time. Part of the reason I’ve done as well as I have at the Solo 20-lap races at Willow and elsewhere is that so many other riders simply didn’t train or prepare mentally to ride for a measly 20 laps.
I think that a culture of six-lap sprint races has left the average club racer’s body and brain unwilling to try. And let’s put this into perspective: A 20-lap race at Willow is five laps SHORTER than the 25-lap AMA Superbike National that took place at the track in 1998. But 20 laps is considered an “endurance” race? Huh?
Sorbo:
I agree, Solo 20 is not an endurance race, it’s extra Saturday practice. You’re on to something with the six-lap culture. I’ve seen fast club guys show up at Pro races and only practice for their normal club amount of practice time. I never even saw them in the race.
Endurance racing is more work than sprint racing. It takes a different outlook and has different goals. It teaches different skills by rewarding consistency and planning above outright speed. It is therefore the best way to train. Ask Josh Hayes how many laps he did on Team Hammer endurance bikes.
Problem is very few people start out with endurance racing like I did. They need to be shown how good it is for them. At this point any club is taking a big risk scheduling an endurance race because most people won’t sign up.
In defense of the non endurance wimps, a modern bike with modern tires is a much faster combination than the bikes and tires of the eighties and nineties and therefore is more work to ride longer. However, that is all the more reason to work on consistency.
Whatever shall we do?
Gougis:
Ed, you’re wrong, and here’s why: It’s not harder to ride a modern bike than a bike from the 80s. People used to follow me into the pits when I raced a GPz550 and ask me what was wrong with the bike, because it looked perfectly evil out there – and I was like, what are you talking about? That’s normal!
I’m not sure it has anything to do with the machines. I think it’s the generation of riders raised on an 18-minute track day session diet – and many of whom can’t even make it through a session. Add to that a lack of an understanding as to why the club (or even pro organization) should offer such races, and the expense involved in doing it, and the fact that a club operator figures they can cram three sprint races into the space of a one-hour team challenge, and you’ve got an explanation as to the demise of the discipline.
The fix comes in small doses. CMRA runs Solo 30 and Team 60 races. They don’t do it every round, but when there’s time on the schedule, they slot them in. Those racers are using the shorter endurance races to get ready for the sprints – check out the names atop the points tables. And those racers are better prepared for not just the sprints, but for the full 4-, 6- and 8-hour endurance races. Moto West Grand Prix ran Solo 20 races in 2014. Ron Cole ran them and you could see him improve from weekend to weekend. By the end of the year, he was on the podium in the expert Formula One races.
The fact is that endurance racing makes better sprint racers – at least at the club level. Clubs could market that fact to their racers, give them just a bit of a break on the entry fee, and look for sponsors to back the races (I’d go with tire and oil companies, myself). When I say a break on entry fees, say for a 60-minute tag-team race, charge the team the cost of two sprint races. The club might be able to run three sprints during that period, so charging for two is a bit of a discount.
And stick with it. It doesn’t pay off immediately. But I can tell you that I know of people who aren’t sprint racing on Sundays because they no longer get to do long races on Saturdays.
Sorbo:
Dude, you get way too much enjoyment out of saying I’m wrong. Faster bikes are harder to ride than slower bikes. Lots of reasons why endurance racing has bottomed out. We agree that endurance racing is good for you like fluoridated water, vaccinations and the scientific approach.
That crazy club based in Texas is doing good stuff with endurance races, the mini clubs in SoCal are doing a good amount of endurance including true endurance racing, 24 Hours.
The fix is as easy as getting McDonalds to bring back the McRib. Vote with your dollars. Enter every endurance race you can. Explain to your friends why they should team up with you. You think tires will cost too much? Use track day tires, they cost less and last longer, less pit stops and the whole point is to work on your consistency.