1974 FIM Motocross World Championship

The 1974 FIM Motocross World Championship was the 18th FIM Motocross Racing World Championship season.

Summary edit

Heikki Mikkola claimed his first 500cc world championship in a season-long battle with three-time world champion Roger De Coster that wasn't decided until the final Grand Prix of the season.[1] The 250cc world championship ended in controversy as Russian riders used questionable riding tactics to secure the championship for Gennady Moiseyev over Jaroslav Falta.[2][3]

500cc Class edit

Mikkola and De Coster dominated the series winning 17 of the 22 races as they competed for the premier division in motocross racing.[4] Suzuki hired former privateer, Gerrit Wolsink to be De Coster's teammate. Former world champion, Bengt Åberg, left Husqvarna to join the Bultaco factory racing team. Brad Lackey replaced the departed Åberg, joining Mikkola and Arne Kring on the Husqvarna team while, Christer Hammargren left Husqvarna to replace Lackey on the Kawasaki team. Maico returned with the 1973 500cc championship runner-up, Willy Bauer and 35-year-old Adolf Weil, while the Yamaha team was represented by Jaak van Velthoven and Åke Jonsson.

The season began at the Austrian Grand Prix where Husqvarna's Mikkola won both races while De Coster's Suzuki had engine problems in the first race then suffered a flat tire in the second moto.[5] Mikkola continued his winning streak with two more victories at the French Grand Prix, relegating De Coster to second in both races.[5] Mikkola won a fifth consecutive moto at the Danish Grand Prix while De Coster retired with a loose exhaust pipe.[5]

De Coster finally scored his first moto win with a second moto victory in Denmark, holding Mikkola to second place.[4] In the Czechoslovakian Grand Prix, Mikkola took a victory in the first race and, was leading the second race when it began to rain causing him to crash three times, allowing De Coster to take the victory.[5] At the halfway point of the season, Mikkola and De Coster had accounted for all of the race wins with Mikkola winning 7 motos to De Coster's 3 wins.[4]

At the German Grand Prix, Mikkola injured his ribs during practice and missed the race, allowing Maico rider, Adolf Weil to finally break the monopoly with a win in the first race at his home Grand Prix while De Coster finished in fourth place.[5] A malfunctioning front brake caused De Coster to crash in the second race while his Suzuki teammate, Gerrit Wolsink took the win.[5] Three weeks later at the British Grand Prix, Mikkola was back in action however, a bent brake pedal in a first turn crash forced him out of the race.[5] De Coster was leading the race when his rear suspension broke and led to his retirement, allowing Yamaha rider Jaak van Velthoven to claim the victory.[5] De Coster came back to win the second race while Mikkola once again was involved in a first turn crash with Weil putting him in last place.[5] In a display of determination, Mikkola fought his way through the pack and into third place after 10 laps.[5]

The series then crossed the Atlantic for the United States Grand Prix with Mikkola holding a 25-point lead in the standings.[6] De Coster had suffered mechanical breakdowns while leading five races.[6] In the first moto, Wolsink held the lead before allowing his teammate De Coster to pass him and collect maximum championship points three laps from the finish.[6] Mikkola rode the last four laps with a flat tire to salvage a fourth-place finish.[5] De Coster was hindered by a damaged front wheel hub in the second race while his teammate Wolsink barely held off a charging Mikkola to win the race by a one-foot margin and deny Mikkola valuable championship points.[6] An exhausted Wolsink collapsed from his bike immediately after crossing the finish line.[6][7]

 
Citadel of Namur with track visible to far left

Back in Europe for the Dutch Grand Prix, Mikkola and De Coster traded moto wins in the exhausting deep, sand track at Markelo.[5] Going into the final two events of the season, Mikkola held a 10-point lead meaning that De Coster would have to win three of the last four motos to secure his fourth consecutive 500cc world championship.[5]

The setting of the Belgian Grand Prix was a rugged, narrow track in the forests surrounding the picturesque hilltop Citadel of Namur.[5] First held in 1947, the Namur circuit was known as the Monaco of the motocross grand prix circuit in reference to the prestigious Formula One race.[8]

Wolsink took the lead at the start of the first race while Mikkola and De Coster battled their way to the front of the pack.[5] When Wolsink's engine seized, the two series points leaders once again found themselves first and second with Mikkola holding on to the lead to the end of the race.[5] De Coster had to win the final three races to overtake Mikkola for the championship.[5] Wolsink once again grabbed the early lead in the second race but, soon crashed allowing De Coster into the lead with Mikkola in second place.[5] De Coster continued to widen his lead to win the second moto to extend the championship points battle to the final race of the season in Luxembourg.[5] In the first race, De Coster worked his way through the pack to take the lead before his Suzuki suffered an engine problem forcing him out of the race.[5] Mikkola took over the lead and won the race to clinch his first world championship.[1]

De Coster's Suzuki suffered mechanical breakdowns while he was leading five races, Mikkola's Husqvarna showed a perfect mechanical reliability by finishing every race.[9][10] Mikkola credited much of his success to his Husqvarna factory mechanic, Per-Olaf Persson, whose meticulous preparation and maintenance greatly improved the reliability of his motorcycle.[5][11]

250cc Class edit

The 250cc championship was a battle between Soviet KTM rider Gennady Moiseyev and Czech ČZ rider Jaroslav Falta which ended in controversy at the final race of the season.[2] Moiseyev won the first moto and took the overall victory at the season opening Spanish Grand Prix.[2] Falta won both races at the Italian Grand Prix followed with a win in the first moto of his home Grand Prix in Czechoslovakia but, then suffered two breakdowns in Poland while Moiseyev won both races.[2] Falta won a moto in Yugoslavia and at the halfway point of the season, he trailed the Russian rider by 20 points.[2] Each rider took a second place at the West German Grand Prix but, Falta won a moto at the Dutch Grand Prix to close the points gap to 5 points going into the final race of the season in Switzerland.[2]

Falta took the lead in the first race and appeared to be heading for victory while Moiseyev was being slowed by a rear suspension failure.[2] When Falta came upon the slowing Russian rider and tried to pass him, the KTM rider made an attempt to obstruct him allowing second and third place riders, Harry Everts and Håkan Andersson to catch up.[2] When Falta attempted to pass Moiseyev, the Russian rider collided with him causing him to fall off his bike.[2] Falta was quickly able to remount but, finished the race in third place.[2] Falta had to win the final moto to have any chance to claim the world championship.[2]

As the final race began, Falta once again jumped into the lead while Moiseyev was forced to retire on the seventh lap.[2] When Falta came upon two Russian riders, Victor Popenko and Eugeny Rybaltchenko, they appeared to attempt to block him.[2] As Falta tried to pass them, Rybaltchenko rode into him, knocking him down.[2] He remounted in third place as race officials waved the black flag at the two Russian riders, disqualifying them from the race.[2] Falta was able to catch up and pass Everts and Gaston Rahier to recapture the lead and win the race, apparently clinching the world championship.[2] However two hours after the conclusion of the race, jury officials penalized Falta one minute for jumping the start which dropped him to eighth place handing the world championship to Moiseyev.[2]

Grands Prix edit

500cc edit

Round Date Grand Prix Location Race 1 Winner Race 2 Winner Overall Winner Report
1 21 April   Austrian Grand Prix Sittendorf   Heikki Mikkola   Heikki Mikkola   Heikki Mikkola Report
2 5 May   French Grand Prix Gaillefontaine   Heikki Mikkola   Heikki Mikkola   Heikki Mikkola Report
3 26 May   Italian Grand Prix Esanatoglia   Heikki Mikkola   Roger De Coster   Heikki Mikkola Report
4 3 June   Danish Grand Prix Nissebjerget   Heikki Mikkola   Roger De Coster   Heikki Mikkola Report
5 9 June   Czechoslovakian Grand Prix Přerov   Heikki Mikkola   Roger De Coster   Roger De Coster Report
6 16 June   West German Grand Prix Beuren   Adolf Weil   Gerrit Wolsink   Adolf Weil Report
7 7 July   British Grand Prix Dodington Park   Jaak van Velthoven   Roger De Coster   Jaak van Velthoven Report
8 14 July   United States Grand Prix Carlsbad   Roger De Coster   Gerrit Wolsink   Gerrit Wolsink Report
9 28 July   Dutch Grand Prix Markelo   Heikki Mikkola   Roger De Coster   Roger De Coster Report
10 4 August   Belgian Grand Prix Namur   Heikki Mikkola   Roger De Coster   Roger De Coster Report
11 11 August   Luxembourg Grand Prix Ettelbruck   Heikki Mikkola   Bengt Åberg   Jaak van Velthoven Report

[4][12]

250cc edit

Round Date Grand Prix Location Race 1 Winner Race 2 Winner Overall Winner Report
1 7 April   Spanish Grand Prix Sabadell   Raymond Boven   Gennady Moiseyev   Gennady Moiseyev Report
2 21 April   Italian Grand Prix Gallarate   Jaroslav Falta   Jaroslav Falta   Jaroslav Falta Report
3 5 May   Czechoslovakian Grand Prix Holice   Jiry Churavy   Jaroslav Falta   Miroslav Halm Report
4 12 May   Polish Grand Prix Szczecin   Gennady Moiseyev   Gennady Moiseyev   Gennady Moiseyev Report
5 19 May   Yugoslavian Grand Prix Karlovac   Torleif Hansen   Jaroslav Falta   Torleif Hansen Report
6 2 June   British Grand Prix Portsmouth-Charlton   Harry Everts   Torleif Hansen   Torleif Hansen Report
7 9 June   West German Grand Prix Bielstein   Gaston Rahier   Joël Robert   Gaston Rahier Report
8 16 June   Dutch Grand Prix Valkenswaard   Sylvain Geboers   Jaroslav Falta   Sylvain Geboers Report
9 4 August   Finnish Grand Prix Hyvinkää   Harry Everts   Gennady Moiseyev   Harry Everts Report
10 11 August   Swedish Grand Prix Upplands Väsby   Torleif Hansen   Gennady Moiseyev   Torleif Hansen Report
11 25 August   Swiss Grand Prix Wohlen   Harry Everts   Harry Everts   Harry Everts Report

[13]

Final standings edit

500cc edit

Points are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th 
Points 15 12 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1
Pos Rider Machine AUT
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
DEN
 
CZE
 
GER
 
GBR
 
USA
 
NED
 
BEL
 
LUX
 
Points
1   Heikki Mikkola Husqvarna 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 DNS DNS 3 4 2 1 1 2 1 6 174
2   Roger De Coster Suzuki 9 2 2 1 1 2 1 3 5 1 1 3 3 1 2 1 2 165
3   Adolf Weil Maico 2 2 7 3 2 6 3 2 1 2 3 7 6 5 3 3 4 133
4   Gerrit Wolsink Suzuki 8 5 9 4 4 4 5 4 5 4 1 2 2 1 2 2 124
5   Jaak van Velthoven Yamaha 10 5 5 5 5 3 10 1 2 3 5 4 4 2 3 109
6   Willy Bauer Maico / ČZ 3 3 6 6 6 5 6 3 2 3 5 9 7 88
7   Åke Jonsson Yamaha 5 6 7 2 7 6 5 4 6 4 5 8 9 6 4 3 6 6 5 85
8   Arne Kring Husqvarna 7 7 3 8 7 3 7 4 4 7 3 4 5 7 80
9   Bengt Åberg Bultaco 4 4 4 8 8 8 5 6 9 6 8 10 1 69
10   Brad Lackey Husqvarna 10 9 3 4 8 8 7 7 7 5 5 7 8 9 57
11   Otakar Toman ČZ 6 8 4 8 6 7 28
12   Arne Lodal Maico 10 8 10 10 8 5 9 17
13   Victor Popenko ČZ 8 3 9 15
14   Pierre Karsmakers Yamaha 6 4 13
15   John Banks CCM 7 8 5 13
16   Anatoly Botchkov ČZ 10 6 6 11
17   Christer Hammargren Kawasaki 10 4 9
18   Raymond Heeren Maico 7 8 7
19   Paolo Piron Husqvarna 7 9 6
  Serge Bacou Maico 10 9 10 10 10 6
21   Pauli Piippola ČZ 6 5
  Julien de Roover ČZ 6 5
23   Jimmy Weinert Kawasaki 10 7 5
  André Massant Yamaha 7 10 5
25   Gilbert de Roover Husqvarna 9 8 5
  Andy Roberton Husqvarna/CCM 8 9 5
  Daniel Péan Maico 9 8 5
28   Vic Eastwood Maico 9 10 9 5
29   Vladimir Khudiakov ČZ 10 10 9 10 4
30   Jiri Ondryas ČZ 7 4
  Frans Sigmans Maico 8 10 4
32   Zdenek Strnad ČZ 9 9 4
33   Marty Tripes Husqvarna 8 3
34   Arne Lindfors Maico 9 10 3
35   Jean-Paul Mingels Bultaco 9 2
  Toon Karsmakers Husqvarna 9 2
37   Ivano Bessone ČZ 10 1

Sources:[1][14]

250cc edit

Source:[15]

Points are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th 
Points 15 12 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1
Pos Rider Machine ESP
 
ITA
 
CZE
 
POL
 
YUG
 
GBR
 
GER
 
NED
 
FIN
 
SWE
 
CH
 
Points
1   Gennady Moiseyev KTM 4 1 2 6 1 1 2 3 3 2 6 5 10 1 5 1 145
2   Jaroslav Falta ČZ 3 1 1 1 1 4 7 2 1 2 4 3 8 139
3   Harry Everts Puch 6 2 3 7 4 4 7 1 4 10 5 3 4 1 4 4 1 1 132
4   Torleif Hansen Kawasaki 4 1 3 2 1 5 1 3 3 101
5   Gaston Rahier Suzuki 10 4 8 8 2 2 4 10 1 3 4 9 8 9 5 4 96
6   Håkan Andersson Yamaha 3 4 6 3 2 2 2 2 81
7   Pavel Rulev KTM 2 6 3 9 3 10 3 6 6 5 7 6 75
8   Miroslav Halm ČZ 5 2 3 2 4 8 9 7 10 7 7 7 70
9   Hans Maisch Maico 9 5 2 6 5 5 2 4 2 69
10   Joël Robert Suzuki 5 9 4 7 9 4 1 3 8 58
11   Sylvain Geboers Suzuki 7 5 3 8 1 2 8 53
12   Raymond Boven Montesa 1 5 7 10 6 5 2 49
13   Torao Suzuki Yamaha 5 6 3 4 6 6 5 45
14   Jim Pomeroy Bultaco 7 10 7 3 8 3 6 7 41
15   Vic Allan Bultaco 8 9 5 4 5 4 33
16   Herbert Schmitz Puch 8 6 6 6 8 8 9 10 6 10 33
17   Kalevi Vehkonen Husqvarna 9 9 5 6 5 9 6 28
18   Jiry Churavy ČZ 1 6 5 26
19   Zdeneck Velky ČZ 8 3 9 10 5 22
20   Evgeniy Rybalchenko ČZ 7 8 9 6 8 17
21   Jean-Claude Laquaye Yamaha 10 10 8 8 7 8 15
22   Antonin Baborowsky ČZ 2 10 13
23   Jo Lammers Bultaco 7 7 7 12
24   Olle Pettersson Kawasaki 8 10 7 9 10 11
25   Håkan Carlqvist Ossa 8 8 10 7
26   Anatoly Ovchinnikov ČZ 10 10 7 6
27   Malcolm Davis Bultaco 7 4
28   Alessandro Gritti KTM 9 9 4
  Claude Jobe Montesa 9 9 4
30   Erkki Sundström Husqvarna 9 2
  Uno Palm Husqvarna 9 2
  Max Bunter KTM 9 2
33   Josef Festa ČZ 10 1
  Jean-Claude Nowak Montesa 10 1
  René Rossy KTM 10 1

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "1974 500cc motocross world championship final standings". memotocross.fr. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "1974 250 World Championship". vintageworksbikes.com. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  3. ^ "Falta's Superbowl Winning 1974 CZ250". thefasthouse.com. Archived from the original on 1 February 2016. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d "1974 500cc motocross world championship race results". memotocross.fr. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Pratt, Terry (January 1975). "Grand Prix Wrap-Up". Cycle World. p. 46.
  6. ^ a b c d e McDermott, Barry (22 July 1974). "It's Easier To Get Hurt Than to the Top". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  7. ^ "Carlsbad's Last Motocross Grand Prix Is Today : Raceway Where the Sport Developed Has Produced Its Share of Memories". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  8. ^ "The Circuit and its Legend". memotocross.fr. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  9. ^ "Heikki Mikkola #1". Canadian Motorcycle Association. Retrieved 1 March 2024.
  10. ^ McDermott, Barry (22 July 1974). "It's Easier To Get Hurt Than to the Top". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 1 March 2024.
  11. ^ "Heikki Mikkola Interview Page 2". jwvanessen.com. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  12. ^ "1974 500cc motocross world championship race results". jwvanessen.com. Archived from the original on 16 January 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  13. ^ "1974 250cc motocross world championship race results". memotocross.fr. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  14. ^ "1974 500cc motocross world championship final standings" (PDF). memotocross.fr. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  15. ^ "1974 250cc motocross world championship final standings" (PDF). memotocross.fr. Retrieved 2 January 2023.

External links edit