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Danny LaPorte
1979 500cc motocross national champion
Member of first U.S. winning Motocross des Nations team 250cc
motocross world champion
Danny LaPorte helped the United States make the transition
from underdog to world leader in the sport of motocross. The rider from Los
Angeles scored an AMA 500cc National Motocross Championship in 1979 before
going on to become the first American to win the FIM 250cc World Motocross
Championship in 1982. LaPorte was also a key member of the 1981 Team USA
Motocross and Trophee des Nations squad that brought America its first win in
the prestigious international Olympic-like competition. LaPorte was
born in Los Angeles on December 3, 1957. His dad was an avid off-road
motorcyclist and young Danny grew up riding in the desert and in the numerous
small vacant lots and informal motocross tracks near his Torrance, California,
home. "This was the late 1960s and early 70s," LaPorte
explained. "There were five or six motocross tracks within a half-hour drive of
home. With the inexpensive two-strokes that were coming in, there was an
explosion in motocross during that period. It was an exciting time and place to
grow up." LaPorte started racing local motocross events when he was
11. At first, he was a little intimidated by being on the track with all the
other riders, but he soon found that he was a natural at the sport. He was so
good, in fact, that he quickly became one of the leading young riders in
Southern California by the mid 1970s. At 16 LaPorte turned
professional in local CMC events and began making money. "The first
prize money I earned was $65 at Indian Dunes," LaPorte remembers. "I thought I
could retire right there." Maybe winning came too easy, or LaPorte was
simply looking for new challenges something that would become a
recurring theme throughout his racing career. Whatever the case, he was bored
and burnt out with racing by 17. A trip to Snake River Canyon, Idaho, to watch
Evel Knievels ill-fated rocket cycle jump changed all that.
"There
was a motocross race held in conjunction with the jump and it had a $100,000
purse," LaPorte said. "I watched Marty Smith win the 125 race and I
couldnt believe it. I raced against and often beat Marty and here he was
winning this big money race. I was happy for him and it got me inspired
again." After his trip to Snake River, LaPorte dove wholeheartedly
back into racing and he won like never before. He won so many races in Southern
California that he got a call from Suzuki at the end of 1975 asking him to join
its factory racing team the next season. He accepted the offer and in 1976 he
debuted in the AMA 125cc National Motocross Series. "There was a real
youth-movement push by the factories that year," LaPorte recalls. "I came in
that year along with guys like Bob Hannah, Broc Glover and Jeff Ward. All these
kids who were tearing up the tracks in Southern California." The epic
entrance of Bob Hannah overshadowed LaPortes debut in AMA National
Motocross, but LaPorte did get into the thick of the Hannah/Marty Smith battles
a number of times, and even managed to win twice in the eight-race 125 series.
His victory in Houston in August marked not only his first national win, but
also the first-ever victory for Suzuki in AMA 125 National Motocross
competition. He ended the season a solid third (just one point out of second)
in the 1976 AMA 125 Motocross standings. LaPorte came back in 1977
and nearly won the 125 national championship with Suzuki. In perhaps the most
notorious season finale in the history of AMA Motocross, Yamaha used
controversial team tactics in the final round to help Broc Glover win the
title. The championship ended with Glover and LaPorte tied in points. Glover
won by virtue of earning more moto wins, but the way the Yamaha factory team
helped Glover win the final moto became part of motocross racing lore.
LaPorte explains: "The final race of the season was San Antonio, Texas. Glover
and I were virtually even going into the last race. Yamaha moved all of their
big guns from the other classes down to the 125 class for the race and they
lined up on both sides of me in both motos. "Naturally, at the start
of both races I was pushed out and by the time I worked through traffic, Hannah
and Glover were gone. Glover still needed to win the final moto and Hannah was
leading late in the race. Bob didnt like pulling over for anyone and as
stubborn as he was Yamaha panicked and on the last lap they put out the
infamous (and incorrectly spelled) pit board that read 'Let Broc Bye.' Hannah
finally did pull over and gave the win to Glover and thats how they won
the championship." In spite of the controversial way he lost the
title, LaPorte carries no grudge against Yamaha. "It was smart
strategy by their team," LaPorte said. "They just made a mistake throwing the
sign up there for the whole world to see." In 1978, LaPorte moved to
the 500cc class, still with Suzuki. He won the season opener and had other good
outings, but a string of bad luck with mechanical problems caused him to finish
the season ranked fifth. In 1979, LaPorte returned for a fourth year
with Suzuki and got revenge of sorts on Yamaha when he narrowly beat
Yamahas Mike Bell for the AMA 500cc National Motocross Championship. He
won three races en route to earning his sole AMA national championship. Always
more of an outdoor specialist, LaPorte cracked the top 10 for the first time in
AMA Supercross that season, taking ninth in that series. The 1980
campaign was a big disappointment for LaPorte, who spent most of the year
searching in vain for the combination that brought him the 500cc title in 1979.
There were flashes of brilliance LaPorte was runner-up in the 500cc U.S.
Grand Prix at Carlsbad and he won a 500cc national in St. Petersburg, Florida
but for the most part he suffered through a long season. LaPorte
finished the year ranked seventh in the AMA 500cc National Motocross
Championship and the St. Petersburg race proved to be his final AMA national
victory. In 1981, Roger DeCoster moved to Honda to act as team advisor
and, having great faith in LaPorte, he convince him to join Honda as well.
LaPorte earned four podium finishes and ended the year ranked fourth in the
500cc nationals, but he suffered his first season without a victory.
It looked as if 1981 would be another forgettable year for LaPorte, but that
was before he and teammates Chuck Sun, Johnny OMara and Donnie Hansen
traveled to Germany for the Motocross and Trophee des Nations. LaPorte was one
of the leading scorers on the team that finally brought the United States its
first victory in the celebrated international event. That years victory
for Team USA was perhaps the single most important accomplishment in American
motocross history. It was a turning point for the sport in this country and
proved that America had finally mastered the sport brought over by the
Europeans a decade earlier. His success at the des Nations inspired
LaPorte. Once again, he sought new challenges and asked Honda if there were any
openings in the companys World Championship team. Unfortunately, the team
was already set, but Yamahas European racing consultant Heikki Mikkola
had talked to LaPorte after the des Nations, telling him of a possible opening
on that team. A deal was made and in 1982 LaPorte headed off to Europe to
pursue the 250cc World Championship. "It had always been a dream of
mine to race in the World Championship," LaPorte explained. "Even though I
could have made twice the money staying in America, I just knew that those
kinds of opportunities didnt come along often and I wanted to take the
chance." It proved to be the best move of LaPortes racing
career. Riding on the factory Yamaha squad, he shocked the European
establishment and won five rounds, including four straight, at one point, to
become the first American to win the FIM 250cc World Motocross Championship.
LaPorte won his title only weeks after long-suffering Brad Lackey finally won
the 500cc championship hed been striving to win for years. Lackey and
LaPortes championships, the first ever for U.S. riders, solidified
Americas standings in the world motocross community.
 Danny LaPorte 2003 |
LaPortes 1982 world championship campaign was a
come-from-behind classic. He was up against heavily favored world champion
Georges Jobé and a host of other talented and experienced world-class
riders. The season began slowly for LaPorte, but he gained confidence
mid-season by winning the second moto of the Czechoslovakian Grand Prix. His
first GP victory came in France. He followed that up with a win in Great
Britain. The turning point came on the sands of Holland. LaPorte upset the sand
specialists by winning both motos and prompted four-time world champ Heikki
Mikkola to proclaim, "Today I saw a motocrosser. Danny rode a perfect race, not
one mistake. I have not seen a better race." Europeans became fast
fans of "Danny the Door" LaPorte means door in French and he
adapted easily to the lifestyle there. He adapted so well that he later moved
and lived in Europe for much of the 1990s. Despite winning three GPs
in 1983, LaPorte lost his 250cc world title to Jobé. He then went on to
try the 500s, but with uncompetitive machinery he was unable to regain the form
that led him to his earlier championship. LaPorte wanted to give
international motorcycle rally racing a try, but at the time motocross racers
had not been successful at making the transition to rally, and none of the
leading teams seemed interested in hiring him. To prove that motocross racers
could succeed at rally, LaPorte came home and began racing for Kawasaki in
cross-country racing events. LaPorte proved an instant success, winning the
famous Baja 1000 three straight years as part of Kawasakis factory
team. With that, the European rally teams came calling, and during
most of the 1990s LaPorte lived in Europe and raced international rally events.
He had good success in that arena and in 1992 he won a stage and finished
second overall in the grueling Dakar Rally riding for Cagiva. While
living overseas, LaPorte helped set up FMF Racings European operations.
In 1997, he and his family moved back to his native Southern California. He
continues to ride and even made headlines when he considered a comeback to AMA
Motocross in 2002, but broke his leg in a training crash. LaPorte will
always be remembered as one of the most influential riders in the period when
American motocrossers made the move from also-rans to world champions.
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