|

Malcolm Smith Off-Road Racing
Champion Star of "On Any Sunday"
| Smith's first raced in 1956 atop a 1949 Matchless 500cc motorcycle.
Later, he was associated with Husqvarna motorcycles. His renown grew as he won
races in the 1960s and 1970s. Smith won eight gold medals between 1966 and 1976
in the International Six Day Trial, the European cross-country event considered
the Olympics of motorcycling. He is a six-time winner of the Baja 1000, three
times on a motorcycle and three times in a car; a four time winner of the Baja
500; has twice won the Mint 400 in Nevada and the Roof of Africa Rallye;
participated in the Paris Dakar Rally twice; and was the overall winner of the
Atlas Rallye in the mountains of Morocco. |
Malcolm Smith was a pioneer in off-road motorcycling. He
gained fame for his accomplishments in the Baja 1000 and for his gold-medal
winning rides in the International Six Day Enduro competitions, but by far his
biggest claim to fame was being a star of the influential 1970s motorcycle
movie, "On Any Sunday." The scenes of Smith play-riding with his buddies, which
included popular actor Steve McQueen, showed people across the country just how
fun motorcycling could be. The movie helped launch an explosion in the
popularity of off-road motorcycling in America. Smith was born on
March 4, 1941, on Salt Spring Island in British Columbia, Canada. His father
was a gold miner in northern British Columbia who took his earnings and
purchased a sheep ranch on Salt Spring Island in the early 1940s. Malcolm spent
his early years on the sheep farm. By the time he was 5 years old his parents
(both U.S. citizens) were tired of the constant cloudy and rainy weather of the
Pacific Northwest, so they moved the family to sunny Southern California.
When Smith was 13, he noticed a neighbor had an old scooter in his garage.
Malcolm asked about buying the scooter and the neighbor agreed to sell it to
him for $50. Smith worked hard and earned money by mowing lawns and doing other
odd jobs, but when he went to buy the scooter, the neighbor had changed his
mind. "I was heartbroken," recalls Smith.
His
parents took pity on him and took him to a motorcycle shop where he found a
great deal on a new Lambretta motor scooter. Smith took his first ride in an
alley behind the shop in downtown San Bernardino. The Smiths lived next to the
San Bernardino National Forest, so the young Smith and a neighborhood friend,
who also owned a scooter, turned their scooters into off-road bikes.
"We had a deal with the schools football coach that he would give us all
the teams worn out football cleats. We would pick up used scooter tires
and screw in the old football cleats and those were our knobbies." At
15, Smith sold his scooter and bought a real dirt bike, a Matchless. One minor
problem for Smith, who was small for his age, was that he couldnt
kick-start the big thumper. He would have to start at the top of an incline and
coast downhill to start the bike. "If I got out in the woods and
killed the motor I couldnt restart it," Smith recalled. "I either had to
push it on top of a hill, which was really tough for me to do, or I would have
to hike back down to the neighborhood to get some of my buddies to help me push
it to the top of a hill. Needless to say, I learned to be pretty good with the
clutch." Smith would raid the dumpster of a local dealer for parts and
tires that were good enough to use on the old Matchless. Finally the owner of
the shop, Rush "Pappy" Mott, got tired of seeing him around the trash, so he
hired him to work after school and during the summer. Smith credits Mott with
giving him good business sense. "In those days, you couldnt
finance motorcycles, so he had his own financing system. He got the
persons address would verify it, then drive to the house and look to see
how well the place was kept up. If it was well kept, he would give them credit.
If not, he wouldnt. He did real well with that." Smith enjoyed
the mechanical aspects of the sport so much that he enrolled in college to
become an aviation mechanic. He met Norm McDonald and Kenny Johnson (who
founded K&N). Norm convinced Smith to come to work for them building racing
engines. Smith broke the "bad news" to his parents that he was going to drop
out of college after three years to work on motorcycles. Smiths
first taste of competition was at a local hare scrambles race in Riverside,
California. He rode his 1953 Matchless to the race and figured that in order to
race he would need to hold the throttle wide open. "We entered the
first turn and I just stayed on the throttle and ended up knocking a bunch of
people down. I can vividly recall seeing a chain right next to my face with the
rear wheel going around. I got up from that crash and crashed about 13 more
times and ended up second place. Going home I started thinking, If I
wasnt laying on the ground so much I could have won that race. The
next month I went back determined to ride my ability and I did win the race
that time."
While Smith continued to race, he never got too serious about the
competition aspect. Motorcycling was his business and racing was a fun hobby.
Smith began racing a Greeves for Nick Nicholson. Smith recalls the big
sponsorship deal he had with Nicholson. "If I won the race I could send him the
receipt for the entry fee and he would pay my entry fee." One
afternoon in the mid-1960s, a gentleman came into the shop and asked to talk to
Smith. That man was Edison Dye. He was importing a spindly-looking,
Swedish-made motorcycle called Husqvarna and he wanted Smith to race the bike.
Smith, reluctant to give up on his "sponsored" ride with Greeves, was at first
reluctant to accept Dyes proposal. Two things changed Smiths mind:
The Husky turned out to be a great dirt bike, and Dye promised to pay
Smiths way to participate in the International Six Day Trials (now called
the International Six Day Enduro), something Smith had dreamed about for
years. Smith was successful on the Husqvarna from the very start and
his name would become synonymous with the Swedish manufacturer. In
1966, Smith participated in his first Six Days in Sweden. Being strictly a
Southern California rider up to that time, Smith had never ridden in the
conditions that greeted him in Sweden, complete with mud, rocks and roots. He
crashed numerous times and nearly managed to damage his bike beyond repair. Yet
he pressed on and earned a silver medal. The next year in Poland,
Smith returned and earned his first gold medal, something he would do seven
more times during his racing career, making him the most successful American
rider in the history of the Six Days competition to that point. Next
to his Six Days success, Smith is also well known for his exploits in the
famous Baja 1000 in Mexico. For a month before the first Baja race in 1967,
Smith spent his spare time preparing his Husky and closely studying a guidebook
to Baja. Legendary desert racer J.N. Roberts was his teammate. The two finished
first motorcycle and second vehicle overall. At the halfway point, they were
nearly five hours ahead of the next vehicle, but several missed turns cost them
the overall victory. After winning the race, Smith was driving back
with a friend when their van broke down. After sitting on the desolate road for
about eight hours, a truck finally came along. It was hauling live sea turtles
to Ensenada. The driver picked them up, but had no room in the cab, so Smith
rode on top of the sea turtles, which were turned over on their backs, for
three days. "Every time we came to a creek crossing he had to stop and
water down the turtles to keep the turtles alive," Smith said with a smile. "I
hadnt bathed since the start of the race and there were no phones so no
one at home had heard from me in five days. It was quite an adventure."
Smith said that taking part in Bruce Browns 1972 classic movie "On
Any Sunday" nearly didnt happen. Brown was already well known for his
surfing movie, "Endless Summer," and was a customer of Smiths. Smith had
just purchased the K&N dealership from Kenny and Norm and was really having
a difficult time trying to manage the business. Brown called and told Smith he
was about ready to start shooting the movie and Smith reluctantly told him that
he wouldn't be able to be in the movie because of the time involved in running
the dealership. Brown said that he would begin shooting in about a month and he
would call Smith back then. Fortunately when he called back, Smith had gotten
things at the dealership under control and felt that he could take some time to
do the movie. "Bruce came and shot footage at the Six Day and some
other races. Then later we shot the closing footage of the movie down in Mexico
and at Camp Pendleton on the coast and that only took three or four days. I
really didnt think that I was going to be in the movie that much and then
when it came out I was really amazed. The recognition I got from that movie was
really unbelievable. People still come up to me today and tell me they really
didnt have anything to do with motorcycling until they saw the movie.
Husqvarna sales doubled in the year following the movie." About the
time the movie came out Smith began importing nylon-lined throttle and brake
cables from Europe. They sold like hotcakes in America and his accessory
business, Malcolm Smith Racing Products, was born. Soon afterwards, he began
selling jerseys, then boots and finally just about every accessory available
for off-road bikes. Smiths business flourished and he sold the company in
1987. Smith still serves as a consultant to the aftermarket business that bears
his name. When inducted into the Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 1998,
Smith was still involved in overseeing his motorcycle dealership in Riverside,
California. He also conducts special invitation-only off-road rides in Mexico
and South America. The television program "National Geographic Explorer" did a
feature with Smith and singer Lyle Lovett on a ride in Chile. He frequently
gives talks on preserving riding areas and interviews on the early days of
off-road riding, and he still enjoys strapping on his helmet and taking a good
ride in the mountains.
|
The Biker eNews
is a non-profit public service for the Tidewater and Peninsular Motorcycle
Community. We are not affiliated with any organization or business. The Biker
eNews is owned, operated and paid for by Phillip Floria. We accept no commercial advertising; our links
are links of interest for motorcycle enthusiasts. |
Back
|