Ventura Outlaw Racing

Words and Photos By Keith May
(Originally appeared in Motorcyclist magazine)

At high-noon, event organizer John Parker tried to make clear the need to play nice and stay on schedule to the gathered riders. Twice a year, Parker—along with promoter Daniel Schoenewald and Ventura Raceway’s Jim Naylor—has his hands full with 200 riders, 1500 spectators and a 10:00 p.m. curfew. It’s like a rattlesnake roundup, only less predictable.

There hasn’t been much dirt-track racing in Southern California since the demise of Ascot Park in 1990, but recently there has been a resurgence. Gene Romero’s traveling West Coast Flat Track Series gives the Pros a place to race, while Southern California Flat Track Association events at Perris Raceway and a four-race Saturday-afternoon series at Costa Mesa Speedway cater to amateurs. However, the Ventura races—billed as an “Ascot Reunion”—aren’t affiliated with any of those, run as an old-fashioned “outlaw” event.

Madera, California’s Brandon Rothell doesn’t care about any of that. He’s a third-generation racer on his first bike: a 2006 Suzuki RM85 prepped by his pop, Rocky. The 12-year-old has only been riding for two years, but advanced to Expert in just a year and a half. Chowchilla is the pair’s home track, but they travel all over hunting rabbits. “You don’t learn anything being the rabbit,” explains Rocky, which is why his boy spends his time following more experienced racers on larger bikes. You can find him full-throttle, playing the fox, on the inside. “They don’t mind him out there at all. He’s in complete control of that bike and is a safe rider. That Suzuki is so clean because he never crashes.” And because Rocky is all eyes and ears to any advice given, sponsors line up down those spotless fenders. With so much bike control on display, it’s surprising to hear that Brandon has never even ridden trails. Go-karting was his childhood passion and his only seat time has been on the racetrack. Until he wins factory support, he practices sliding his bicycle around a small bullring in his backyard, carpet taped to the bottom of his left sneaker. Despite old tires (“Saving them for next weekend”), #4 wins the Junior class and places second in 250cc Amateur Modern.

Having a second bike is a dream for some but a pain in the ass for others. The Hooligan Class rides their machines to the track, removes their kickstands and leans them against giant palm trees—natural shade from which to watch the other racers scrambling around with tools, measuring pre-mix, changing tires and wrestling themselves into tight leathers. Yeah, it’s a great show, but sure looks like a lot of work. Hell, who needs bar-risers when you have ape-hangers? First or last doesn’t matter when all you really care about is parading your vintage iron around a dirt oval at a brisk but modest pace.

Hooligans of a different variety include Speedway stars, thrill-seeking motocrossers and hybrid supermotards. Masters of bull rings, big air and brake slides, these dirt-track novices bounce around the Ventura oval like Henry Rollins in a mosh pit. The varied surface proves hard to diagnose: “Too muddy…too dry…too much grip…not enough grip. Did you see me brush the wall?” Bystander and roadracing legend John Kocinski suggests tighter suspension to Cycle World magazine's Mark Cernicky and it appears to help. Blindly through the muddy roost of leaders, they ride with reckless abandon and colorful body language, Visor and goggle tear-offs a welcome blessing.

And then there are those with seemingly unlimited resources to take their passion to the limit. It's really hard to call these men “Outlaws.” Enjoying all the luxuries real sponsorship provides, they rumble through the dusty pits hauling large trailers full of generators, EZ-Ups, multi-drawered tool-chests and second, third and fourth bikes. Elite? Perhaps. But this is their calling and they live to express it.

“We are living up to what a fairgrounds should be,” Ventura Raceway’s Jim Naylor told the L.A. Times in 2002. “This is not about dollars and cents. This is Americana.” The City Council was looking at other, quieter, options for the property despite the raceway’s historical importance. Six years later, the tax board would still prefer something that looks better in travel brochures. Okay, but someone tell me what’s prettier than roaring motorcycles gliding around a slippery dirt oval.





















Call (714) 403-3581 or email keithterrillmay@gmail.com





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