“Speedway racing, rare in America but a European passion, entails straddling a feather-light, wheelie-prone, alcohol-guzzling 500cc single with a radical power-to-weight ratio, minimal suspension, and no brakes.
“My mom and dad split up when we were really young,” he explains, “and I saw my dad every other weekend. Religiously on Friday night he picked us up after school and we went to Costa Mesa Speedway.” Ah, yes... Costa Mesa. Unique in America, this tiny Southern California bullring became a speedway hotbed, training ground for World Champions Bruce Penhall, Sam Ermolenko, Billy Hamill, and, most successful of all, Hancock, whose course was charted when he discovered junior speedway. “I remember thinking, ‘Kids can do this too!’ ” he recalls. “I never looked back. Life’s been sideways for 38 years since!” Encouraged by his mentor Penhall, 18-year-old Hancock moved to England in 1989, entering the world of team motorcycle racing. European fans obsess over hometown speedway squads as rabidly as their US counterparts do football. For years, Hancock raced three nights a week, once each in the British, Swedish, and Polish leagues, while chasing the world championship.
STILL WINNING: Hancock inherited number 45 from fellow American world champ, Bruce Penhall.
This year, one of those inevitable accidents ended an amazing Hancock record run and threatened his title hopes. Since 1995, the speedway crown has been decided in a Grand Prix series comparable to motocross or roadracing. There from the beginning, Hancock had not missed a series race in nearly 19 years, until late August in Poland. “I went around Niels-Kristian Iversen, and he hit a hole,” Hancock says. “His bike, on the back wheel, shot straight across in front of me. He collected the front wheel of my bike, my left hand went under his rear fender and pulled me into his bike, and we went tumbling down the straightaway.” The only crash of Hancock’s Grand Prix season badly broke one finger and dislocated another. He missed the next round, ending his consecutive GP start string at an astonishing 177 straight. “I’ve ridden two weeks after a dislocated shoulder and two weeks after blowing the ACL in my knee,” he says, “so I felt so stupid missing that race. You know, ‘It’s just a finger.’ But it turns out you need your hands! “Everybody was making a big deal out of the string, wondering why I didn’t go and just start the first heat to keep the record alive. But I wouldn’t take that chance. I didn’t care about the record. I wanted to win the world championship.”
SIDEWAYS: Greg Hancock and Andreas Jonsson battle last October at the final round of the world championships in Poland.
The racing gods work in strange ways. Hancock’s British title rival, reigning world champ Tai Woffinden, missed that Polish round, coincidentally sidelined by broken bones in his left hand. In championship terms, the injuries canceled each other out. “I came back just a couple of days after they pulled the pins out of my finger,” Hancock recalls. “I hadn’t raced for a month, and I finished last in my first heat. It was the best last-place finish of my life because I realized everything was okay. My hand hurt, but I could ride. All I had to do was grit my teeth and go for it.” Gutting out the last two championship rounds, Hancock locked up career crown number three. Don’t bet that it will be his last. “In my world,” he reflects, “will to win is the key. I want to win so bad, and I know I’ve been getting better and better over the last few years. I don’t know why I’m learning so much more now. Maybe it’s just taken me this long to understand it all.” Hancock does acknowledge that it takes a special effort to beat riders half his age. Woffinden, for example, was not yet born when Hancock first arrived on the scene in Europe. “On pure aggression, the youngsters will beat me all day long,” he admits. “They’re not afraid to do things that I am. So I have to emulate what they’re doing but with my style and technique. If I’m smooth on the bike and can be a bit quicker at thinking ahead, I’m more likely to beat them than if I just try to be rough and tough. You gotta be smarter.”
THREE-TIME CHAMP! Hancock, who splits his time between Southern California and Sweden, earned his first two world speedway titles in 1997 and 2011.
In the end, Hancock embodies a rare phenomenon: a will to win that is undiminished by the passage of time. “Every year, I want to win the world championship,” he insists. “I train much more than I ever did before, I eat way better than I ever did before, and I feel better than I ever did before. I wake up in the morning full of energy and ready to go. Taking care of yourself is one of the main instruments in life. It’s working well for me, and I’ll keep going as long as I can because I want to win.” Hancock’s thoughts then turn to the future of speedway in America. “You’ve seen Supercross just explode and the potential for speedway to do that is so high,” Hancock says. “It’s a stadium sport; you really can’t get a bad seat. It’s a family sport, and it’s perfect for television. But it just feels like it’s a forgotten sport. “Monster Energy got involved three years ago, and that is the biggest door-opener ever,” he continues. “The ultimate goal is a world championship event in the US. With Monster’s help, I think there’s a good chance.” Might that happen in time for Hancock to race a speedway Grand Prix on his home turf? He responds with a smile and the ageless enthusiasm, which is his defining characteristic. “I’m only 44, so there’s still time!”
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