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E I Addio

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Everything posted by E I Addio

  1. E I Addio

    Your best speedway year

    Wasn’t there some row between Mauger and his promoter about that ? I think the promoter concerned was Mike Parker or Bill Bridgett, but whoever it was persuaded Mauger to stay with his PL club on the promise that the dispute would be sorted out within six weeks, which it wasn't, and Mauger’s ACU International licence got suspended as a result. I can’t remember where I read that, probably one of Maugers books.
  2. E I Addio

    Your best speedway year

    I was speaking in terms of Hunter and Simmons as not being top stars at the time, but two that made tremendous progress in the course of the season. In Simmons case it was, as I said, precipitated by the need to keep his licence for grass track, but both were much better riders at the end of the season, considering Simons was only about 18 or 19 and it was only his second season, and Hunter was I think only in his third season. If I remember correctly without checking Simmons book, it was Malcolm that pushed Dugard out of the West Ham team when he switched leagues early season, and according to Simmons there was bad feeling between them as a result . I don’t know where Dugard went after that.
  3. E I Addio

    Your best speedway year

    Maybe the years have telescoped in my mind. Perhaps ‘63 when Hedge was a on loan at Hackney, perhaps Hedge guesting, but definitely an article in SS using Hedge as an example of flaws in the handicap system.
  4. E I Addio

    Your best speedway year

    Another reason was Trevor Hedge. He was proving a match winner for Wimbledon going off scratch at reserve. I remember an article in SS I think by Eric Linden analysing his performance as an indictment of the handicap system.
  5. E I Addio

    England's best what order.??

    Malcolm Simmons started the ‘64 season in the PL for a very short period , possibly a matter of days but changed when he realised that by riding in a “ pirate “ league he would lose his ACU licence and not be able to ride grass track where he was earning a lot of money , far more than from speedway at the time. Not sure about Norm the Storm but I suspect it was a combination of not wanting to lose his ACU licence and ambition. He always knew he was good and wanted to make it to the where he more than likely would have ended up if not for that terrible hand injury at Prestatyn.
  6. E I Addio

    Your best speedway year

    In fairness , I think at least Monk , Boocock and Hunter were on the way up and were hardly typical of the average PL rider. If there had been no combination of leagues they would likely have made the jump from PL to NL anyway, Similarly there were Malcolm Simmons Norman Hunter and Ray Wilson who were making tremendous progress in the course of the season. It was without doubt the start of a golden era for British Speedway.
  7. E I Addio

    England's best what order.??

    I suppose Sid you have to factor in , not only WF appearances but how well they did. Personally I am so hopelessly biased towards Simmo and Ashby, as personal favourites I find it difficult to be objective, but that said, I think Simmo at his best is probably the overall best but he wasn’t always at his best. N.Boocock was undoubtedly the most consistent over a long period, so on that basis he comes in at 1 . Simmo at his best v- Booey at his best I think Simmo would get it from the gate. Booey was never a great gater, although he did improve as the years went on. I also think Norman Hunter had the talent to be up with them if he had not had that bad hand injury at Prestatyn.
  8. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    Well ,all I would say is this : Japan is not on not on total lock down . It is a partial lockdown. The Japenese Oylympics have not been postponed for no reason at at all.. The Japanese PM has said there might yet be an explosion of Japanese cases. He didn’t say that for no reason. He said it because of received wisdom, which may or not not be correct. But,....big, big big BUT. The a lot of epidemiologists are looking at Japan. and Japan might , just MIGHT be on to something, albeit inadvertently be on to something . I put it no higher than that, Time will tell if they are . I am a cautious person. Lies damned lies and statistics and all that. Life’s experiences have taught me not to jump too quick.. That’s all.. Others may feel differently. I am very lucky living round here where people seem to behave sensibly. .
  9. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    Well that’s a result.. I was going to mention Japan but discretion doing the better part of valour I’ll leave it at that point of agreement and save Japan for another time !
  10. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    No that’s not what I am suggesting . For example after last weeks Friday night applause for the NHS I went out for some exercise and there was a chap at the end of the village singing to all the neighbours with a karaoke machine for about 10 minutes and he is doing this every Friday till the emergency is over. There were probably 30-40 listening all standing a good distance apart and it was all very peasant and friendly . Nothing wrong with that . But not everybody acts with that degree of common sense.
  11. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    The figures for deaths relate to people who contracted the disease up yo a month ago in conditions that existed then.In London at least the trains are reported to be far less crowded today. I have already mentioned precautions taken in supermarkets..
  12. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    What’s the basis for saying that ? Surely the majority of those self isolating were doing so because they were extremely vulnerable or because they were exhibiting preliminary symptoms.
  13. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    A figure of speech to illustrate stupid behaviour one example of which is the number attending the Cheltenham Gold Cup a few weeks ago in confined spaces, and reports of some of things going on in London which seems to now be translating into higher statistics with London being ahead of the rest of the country. As I seem to keep repeating incessantly many of these measures are only necessary because a relatively small percentage don’t exhibit basic common sense in dealing with a dangerous disease.
  14. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    I didn’t mention people in public parks. I don’t know what numbers were involved or how sensibly or stupidly they were behaving, Neither do you. Of the hundreds ,possibly thousands involved it is almost inevitable that some will be carriers. Your comparison with supermarkets is interesting. One is essential , one isn’t. One involved a relatively short period of potential exposure, the other much longer. I don’t know about your area but round here the supermarkets and our local farm shopare only letting a few in at a time on a one in one out basis,and the floors have been divided into squares so every body keeps to their own space. Totally different the thousands in a park. As with all health and safety the ones in the greatest danger are the ones who least recognise the danger. You can’t rely on everyone acting sensibly that’s why we need regulations.
  15. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    Some are grasping it some aren’t. Same with the social distance rules. Some are behaving sensibly others as if they have a death wish. That is a big part of the problem
  16. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    And those who are 64 ? Do they suddenly start staying in ? Like a lot of things in this, any figures will be completely arbitrary .
  17. E I Addio

    Corona virus

    There is no true evidence that it would have killed any number. That is the problem. We are dealing with a disease that is not properly understood and every body is playing catch up based on models, assumption, experience and inspired guesses. The top line figures ( one of which estimated half a million deaths ) assumed no action taken at all but of course action is taken but it is a blunt instrument and nobody quite knew in advance how effective it would be. We can’t protect the elderly. They, like everyone else have to exercise good sense and protect themselves. Going on cruises, and taking their camper vans down to Newquay or going to off the gee-gees at Cheltenham, all of which many have done is not really good sense. Unfortunately the government can’t rely on common sense among the population as a whole. They have to work to and advise to the lowest common denominator, and the more stupid the behaviour of the minority the lower the lowest common denominator has to be, even though it is a pain to the rest.
  18. E I Addio

    Ask The Chairman

    I agree with every word, except he’s not even a particularly nice bloke. Even compared with some of the sports head honchos of recent years he is, as you say out of his depth, lacking the slightest modicum of flair as an administrator and unable to see beyond the end of his nose. I can only assume he’s there because the sport has reached such a low ebb nobody else wants the job.
  19. E I Addio

    In what order would you place these Aussie greats???

    You raise a good point Sid . I think Jack and Ronnie were probably very, very , similar in many ways. I only saw Ronnie Moore at the end of his career after he came back from retirement but boy he was good. His effortless style made an impression that still sticks with me today. Not surprising that many people say Ronnie was the most naturally talented rider that ever sat on a bike. Jack was said to have an “armchair ‘style in the sense he just sat on the bike as if he was sitting in an armchair, letting the bike do all the work, unlike many later riders that climb all over the bike. Leigh Adams was another like it . A very unspectacular style, but not an ounce of effort wasted, and with the bike under perfect control at all times, and an uncanny ability to find grip where others couldn’t.
  20. E I Addio

    In what order would you place these Aussie greats???

    Good post. The only thing I would add is that from everything I have read about Jack Young it seems that good as he was he wasn’t as good as he could have been. He didn’t even start till he was into his 20’s, and in a very different world in those days it seems he didnt take things too seriously. One might say he was perhaps one of the last of what we might call the paid “amateurs” . No special fitness regimes, no special engines, he seems to have relied on pure talent . I think he was world champion within about 5 years of taking the sport up on a converted road bike, and by his second season he was beating some of the top Aussies of the day. In his first season with Edinburgh in the Second Division he beat Jack Parker twice in a special match race. He was perhaps a tad lucky with his first World Final win, that Jackie Biggs nerves apparently got the better of him , but being World Champion means you have to overcome your nerves. I forget the actual statistics when he replaced the great Aub Lawson at West Ham but it was something like 19 maximums in 38 matches. But the speedway world was about to change when Fundin and Briggs came along.... I wouldn’t object to Jack Young being placed second to Crump but he certainly deserves a top two position. BTW, what happened to the under rated Aub Lawson when considering great Aussies ? Coming back to Crump J., though, he was somewhat unlucky to be around at the same time as one of speedways all time legends. If there had been no Richardson how many World Titles would Jason have won ?
  21. E I Addio

    Freddie Lindgren music video

    Eric Chitty was said to be a good singer, often entertaining the crowds with a song, Len Silver, perhaps not so good but according to his book he would often entertain clients at his Silver Ski resort , singing and accompanying himself on the ukulele. I have heard Howdy Byford fancied himself as as singer after a few beers. Are there any other riders known for their singing ,? I use the word singing in the loosest possible way in Fred’s Case. Pity we don’t see Freddie over here any more though..
  22. On the other side of the coin I have to say he guested for Lakeside several times over the years and always rode as if he was a home rider. I remember one occasion when he crashed and hurt his leg badly but he continued riding through the pain barrier and only withdrew once Lakeside reached the point that they couldn’t lose. When he had his bad crash in Poland Lakeside fans collected £750 for him. That’s a measure of how much he was liked. Yes, I know he could be a moaner and a whinger at times, but what I am saying is that it wasn’t all one way.
  23. E I Addio

    Scunthorpe Scorpions 2020

    That’s what happened after Lee Richardson died. In fact I think it was about two months before Lakeside signed a replacement and Lee’s position in the pits remained empty in that period as I recall.
  24. E I Addio

    Britain's Greatest Motorcyclist?

    Half the Ipswich team were ex- scramblers at one point, as were Arthur Browning , Tom Leadbiter and a few others , including today, riders like Richard Lawson and the Worralls. I can’t think of any that started in Speedway and then moved over to an average standard I scrambling. They are totally different techniques. As a side point though, I remember about 6/7 years ago Peter Karlsson rode in a grass track in Kent , on a bike he borrowed from Paul Hurry. He had never sat on a grass track bike before but proved unbeatable in the heats but unfortunately the meeting was rained off before the Finals. Similarly I once saw Anders Michanek in an end of season grass track at Lydden. He absolutely whopped everybody. I don’t think anybody has mentioned Joe Screen yet. He didn’t particularly concentrate on grass track but used to ride in big money continental meetings , which were not always ovals but some included sweeping right hand bends and jumps . By all accounts he was pretty hot stuff. One thing I forgot to mention about Alf Hagon was that he was also winner of the famous Red Marley Hill Climb which adds to his claim to be top all rounder.
  25. E I Addio

    Britain's Greatest Motorcyclist?

    I don’t agree. Speedway takes a bit of time to the idea of controlling the whole thing with the throttle but according to Chris Louis , once he learnt to control the bike he found it quite easy. I don’t think you can limit it to just Speedway and grasstrack. Speedway in particular is not really regarded as part of motor cycling by the main motor cycling fraternity. In fact there are plenty of speedway riders that have never even ridden any other sort of bike, not even a road bike. The point is that if anyone is successful in any other discipline there is little financial incentive to turn to speedway. Greatest British all rounder ? Alf Hagon must be in the frame. Ridden in all disciplines, usually on bikes he built himself , decent speedway second string , British Grasstrack Champion and World Speed Record Holder at something like 209 mph on a bike he built himself.
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