May 2002
|
Martin Belair and
Minnesota Montesa by Thomas Day |
When I first met
Martin at the Cycle World International Motorcycle Show in
January, he was watching the Extreme Trials demonstration.
Or rather, he was watching people watching the demo. He told
me that what he liked best about these demos was the
expressions on spectators' faces when they first saw what a
trials rider could do. It was easy to see what he meant. The
demonstration by 1992 World Champion Tommi Ahvala drew large
crowds. The things he did on his stunt rig are barely
warm-up exercises compared to what Ahvala does on a trials
section, so those spectators haven't seen anything, yet. In
June they'll have a chance to be completely
astounded. Martin graciously
gave me nearly an hour of his time and attempted to update
my knowledge of modern trials jargon and philosophy. He was
probably only partially successful because old habits
die-hard. MMM: When
did you get started in trials? Belair: I
started riding trials in 1969. I rode my first trials event
. . . I think I was nine years old, on a Hodaka Ace 90. I
finished 17th out of 19 guys. We were desert racers. We had
no idea what we were doing. We realized that right away, so
we didn't ride another trials for 8 months. In the meantime
we got trials books and reconfigured our Hodakas. Put the
mufflers back on geared them down. In those days people took
bikes like Hodakas or DT-1s and modified them. We put
obstacles in the back yard and we practiced. When I say
"we," I mean my brother and I. When we went back we were
ready. We were competitive and we knew what we were doing.
But we always laugh about that first event. What a sight we
must have been! We were riding the sections with our goggles
on. We had expansion chambers. I'm sure the trials guys must
have thought . . . I just remember tearing miles of ribbon
out, you know? Just wreaking every section. I'm sure they
were just going, "What are these guys doing?" It was the
best time to be there. It was a golden era. I spent a lot of
time riding at Saddleback Park. There were so many areas to
ride and the terrain was so good. The economy was there and
everybody was riding dirt bikes. And trials was . . . that
era produced the best riders America has ever produced. We
had riders that were competitive in the World Championship.
We produced the world champion from Southern California,
Bernie Schreiber in 1979. Eight out of the top ten riders in
the nation were from Southern California. It was such a hot
bed. We had the terrain. We had sponsorships. We had healthy
clubs because we had 200 people show up at every local
event. It was everything. All those things that go into
making a sport successful. Bernie Schreiber was champion.
Marland Whaley was champion. Lane Leavitt, Don Sweet, Joe
Guggliemeli there were so many good riders, competition was
so intense. I go back and look at those results and it blows
me away. A national in Michigan, I finished 7th place and I
was four points off of the leader. It was very, very
competitive. It was a great era. MMM: Could
you compare those riders to today's riders? Belair:
It's difficult. The machines now are so much better. The
tires. The brakes. The machines help these guys look
spectacular. The machines back then were tanks. You bring
out one of those vintage bikes and put Tommi
[Ahvala] on it and, yeah, he can do some stuff but
nowhere near what he's doing now . . . Back then to go over
every little rock or log, was all this commitment and effort
to work the bike through the section. And now, I could stand
on the thing and point it and it does all the work. The
riders, then, were great. Especially considering the
machinery they used. I think the riders were incredible. I
mean, we had tires that were rock hard. Today, tires are
incredible. The riders now, obviously, are spectacular.
They're amazing. I think the riders, now, are definitely
better. In any sport, they're going to be better. But it's
hard to compare eras. We were awfully good, back then. The
other thing was that we rode a lot more low traction. Lot
more slippery. Trials was a winter sport, initially. And now
it's become a summer sport. So they're riding in much more
high traction areas. It allows them to do much more. We were
riding slippery, slimey, mossy creek beds with rock-hard
tires. It's a different ballgame. MMM: There
was a strange mental glitch for me when I first came back to
paying attention to trials a few years ago. I saw Lampkin
was back up there. I thought, he has to be 100,
practically. Belair:
I've had a number of people say, "that guy's still alive?"
No, no, no. It's the kid [Dougie]. That is a great
story. You know he was just awarded the MBE by the Queen,
made a member of the British Empire? It was in all the
British press. That's quite an honor. That's a big deal.
That whole family, what a motorcycling family! MMM: I've
watched a few of the world rounds on the tube and videos.
Dad sure looks like he's tough on Dougie. They're
no-nonsense . . . they're very good about getting the job
done. Belair:
Dougie . . . having his dad there was everything. Now when
you see them, his dad is much quieter. . . It doesn't look
like a sport you have to be tough in, but it is. At that
level, it's a knife fight . . .. It's serious. Maybe knife
fight's a little exaggerating, but . . . MMM: A
mental knife fight? Belair:
Yeah, that's what it is. I never had that, in my career. I
was happy to be out there, I was competitive, I was riding,
I did my best, I went home. I just never entered that strata
of the Wayleys and the Schreibers. Schreiber, I traveled
with him a little bit. We went to a world round in
Pennsylvania in '78. The guy would take a cold shower the
morning of the trial. He told me, "In Europe, the morning of
the trial I take a cold shower, I drink two espressos, I
don't eat breakfast, and, by the time I get to that first
section, I'm pissed off." MMM: I'll
bet. Belair:
That's what makes a champion. That drive. They're
freaks. MMM: Trials
has never really did "hit" in the US, right? Belair: Not
to the point that people expected, but it did get very, very
popular. I remember big events in Southern California where
there would be 200-300 riders in the novice class. And we
realized then that there's a saturation point. You can have
too many riders in an event and everybody's waiting in line
to ride a section and nobody's having any fun. Trials is a
sport that makes sense on paper. It really does. But it's a
humbling sport. And a lot of people don't like to be
humbled. There's no faking it in trials. You can't put on
all the gear and learn to do a triple and be a hero. If you
can't ride trials . . . you fall down in front of people. It
takes a certain sort of, I call it, knuckle-head. It takes a
knuckle-head to ride trials. I remember a friend of mine
said, "Why would you want to go over those rocks? Isn't
there a road? Trials is pretty healthy right now. I think
it's in as good a shape as it's been in a long time in
America. I don't know if it will ever be big mainstream. I
don't know if it has to be. It's a great sport. The people
who are involved in it are great. I don't think there's any
more passionate, die-hard people than trials riders. To keep
this sport alive . . . the amount of volunteer hours that go
into it. It's a passion. It's growing. There's a lot of
people riding trials for fun now. Not necessarily competing,
just buying them for trail bikes to play on too,
cross-train. I see a lot of guys our age buying trials
bikes. MMM: The
first national I went to was in Duluth four years ago, I was
really impressed with the fact that there were nine year old
kids and sixty year old competitors. I don't know of any
other motorcycle sport like that. Belair: Not
off road. That's one great thing about it. We've got several
national competitors in their sixties. You can do trials
your whole life. It makes sense on paper. It's beautiful on
paper. You can ride in your backyard. You can do it with
your kids. Your expenses are low. Your risk of injury is
low. It's a very acceptable form of motorsports for a lot of
people because it's not offensive. You're not ripping up the
ground. You're not making a lot of noise. MMM: One of
the things I used to like about 70s-era trials bikes was
that, for less than a gallon of gas, you could ride all day.
Is that still the case with modern bikes? Belair:
It's got to be the least expensive motorsport you can
compete in. Your bike is going to last forever. A gallon of
gas is what it costs you to go ride all day. You need a
small piece of terrain. Like I said, it makes sense on
paper. It's such a logical sport. It makes sense in so many
ways. I just don't know if it has what appeals to the
masses. It appeals to a special mind. A special personality
that's intrigued by the challenge of learning a set of
skills. MMM: Which
apply to every area of riding. Belair:
They absolutely do. That's what we see is a lot of
people trying to improve their off-road riding by buying
trials bikes. There's a list of pro motorcrossers that are
buying trials bikes. I've sold, to two private motocross
teams, five bikes to each team. Not national level teams but
regional teams. Five bikes to have his riders cross-train
and improve their skills. It's kind of funny, going back to
what you were saying about low cost, one dad asked me, "How
many hours am I going to get out of this engine?" I said,
"Years." He said, "How often do I have to do a top end?" I
said, "Maybe a set of rings in three years." You know? The
guy didn't believe me. It's a different level of spending
and it's hard for people who come from motocross to realize
how reasonable trials is. You buy the bike. What do you put
on it? Maybe tires once a year, chain, and brake
pads. MMM: Is
trials a small market just in the US or all over the
world? Belair: All
over the world. Total production for all the brands . . ..
you're talking probably 10-12,000 units. Five brands,
worldwide production. That's small. So, Europe, obviously is
the biggest market. Markets like France, Spain, Italy and
England. Those are your top four. The US is the sixth
largest trials market in the world . . . But 10,000 units,
that's small. You talk to any of these big guys here, that's
a minimum. For one brand. For one model. So it's a small
specialty sport. I hear good comparisons to . . . . people
say it's like fly fishing or archery. MMM: I'm
thinking golf. Belair:
It's very comparable to golf. And I say to myself, "Why is
golf so popular?" Because golf is a humbling sport. It's a
humiliating sport. And that's what I think holds trials
back. But for some reason golf has the money, it has the
TV. MMM: It
took a long time. Belair: It
did, but now it's mainstream and it's cool and everybody
does it. Golf's a buddy sport, I think that's one thing that
really helps it. You go out there and you're all
bad. MMM: Trials
has that too. Belair:
Trials is definitely a buddy sport. MMM: You
have the #3 rider on Montesa? Belair:
Ryon Bell. He was #2 last year, #3 this year. Also Chris
Florin finished 8th in the nation. He's a kid who's just
progressing at an unbelievable rate. He's an expert level
rider. He was #3 in the expert class, nationally. He's been
on our team for several years, but, really, in the last
year-and-a-half he's gone from an expert level to a rider
who will probably finish in the top five in the nation.
Chris is from Florida. A weird place for a trials rider to
come from. His dad built him a backyard trials jungle, logs
and rocks, and that's what he learned on. It's funny, where
Ryon Bell's from, it's absolute trials nirvana. You could
hold a world round every ten feet, where he lives. British
Columbia. And Chris comes from a pancake. How do you figure
that? MMM: How
will Montesa's riders do this year? Belair:
It's going to be tough. Very competitive. Geoff's going to
be there. Fred Crosset is obviously the favorite. After
winning last year, he's the favorite. Ryon [Bell] is
very competitive. I think Chris is going to break the top
five. US Montesa M.M.M.
One
of Minnesota's better-kept motorcycling secrets is that we
are the home of an exotic bike distributor (the motorcycle
is very exotic, and the distributor is somewhat exotic).
Martin Belair's US
Montesa is
the importer/distributor of Montesa trials bikes and he's
based in Minnetonka. Martin is a Southern California
transplant who came here for the clean air and tall
mountains. He's also a Master trials rider from America's
golden age of motorcycling and an admitted "trials geek."
This is a special year for observed trials in the Midwest.
Martin's company is one of the sponsors for a two-day World
Outdoor Trials event at Duluth's Spirit Mountain this June.
Martin is also responsible for training the Minnesota
observers to world trials standards and he has planned many
of the event's sections. If you know anything about trials,
you know this is an incredible opportunity for Minnesota
motorcycling enthusiasts.
5477 Byscane Ln.
Minnetonka, Minnesota 55345
Tel: 952.937.8720
http://www.usmontesa.com/
Email: usmontesa@cs.com
* This article originally
appeared in the May
2002 issue of Minnesota
Motorcycle Monthly.