Photos
1981

(1970s)

1980

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

(1990s)


Long Beach Grand Prix

In 1980 my brother Matt raced in the unlimited motorcycle sidecar division on the national tour, and ranked in the top ten.

In 1981, he was invited to participate in the first Long Beach Grand Prix sidecar race.

I borrowed my girlfriend's Nikon and accompanied my brother as a member of his pit crew, pushing the machine from the garage to the pits and generally acting only as a gofer, because I don't know anything about motorcycles.

Matt was the Monkey of the racing team: he clings to the sidecar and hangs his butt out on the turns to keep the three-wheeled machine from overturning, and huddles close to the frame on the straightaways for speed. The.hairpins and chicanes and esses at Long Beach had Matt working like a wingwalker from the days of barnstorming biplanes, leaping and crawling and gripping framework and handholds. It's not exactly like a half an hour on the uneven parallel bars, but then parallel bars don't go 150 on the straightaway, not even in the Olympics.

The racers don't like to be called monkeys. "I'm a moving equilibrium, not a monkey on a stick," Matt said.

It takes two to race a sidecar machine. Matt's driver was also the sponsor, oncologist Dr. James Hays, known as Doc or Racer Jim. The first time I met him I asked him what he did, and he said "I give preautopsy physicals."

The Rig

The Pits

Practice

Race Day