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Alan
Cathcart writes.....
Mike
Hailwood's TT Winning Ducati ... Steve Wynne tells the inside
story
Steve Wynne is the man responsible
for providing Mike the Bike with the means to make his victorious
TT comeback, that has become the stuff of motorcycle racing
legend. Wynne himself raced Ducatis successfully in the
mid-'70s, but in his own judgement was better qualified
to work on the bikes rather than ride them - especially
with the pressures of building his Manchester-based company,
Sports Motorcycles, into one of Britain's top sportbike
dealers taking up so much of his time. But winning an Isle
of Man TT remained an especially burning goal, and so to
do so Wynne took a back seat as a rider and starting working
towards TT success with hired hands.

First time out for the Sports Ducati team
in the Island in 1976 almost brought a fairytale debut victory,
when Roger Nicholls and Steve Tonkin built up a substantial
lead in the 10-lap Production TT on Wynne's 750SS, only
to suffer a broken piston just one lap from the end. The
following year, 1977, saw the inauguration of the TT Formula
1 class, allowing a greater degree of engine tuning than
the old Production rules as well as, especially, complete
freedom of chassis design - aimed, so the cynics held, at
allowing the Japanese factories to be competitive on a real-world
road course, where their powerful but ill-handling streetbikes
had yet to prove themselves. To relate the two categories
to modern classes, Production racing was essentially the
same as Supersport, whereas TT F1 was Superbike racing without
the need to use stock frames and silhouette bodywork - only
a highly modified production street engine.
Steve Wynne's efforts in the '76 Production
TT had persuaded the Ducati factory to sell him an ex-works
900SS-based Endurance racer for the TT F1 race, which in
spite of arriving at the last minute in totally unprepared
guise fresh from completing its last long-distance marathon,
after careful preparation by the Sports Motorcycles team
permitted Roger Nicholls to have the beating of the works
Honda ridden by former world champion Phil Read, before
the race was controversially cut short in circumstances
that gifted Honda a victory - and a world title - which
even they could scarcely have felt they deserved. "The
biggest disappointment of my life," admits Steve Wynne
candidly - but better was yet to come, and revenge would
be doubly sweet. Let Steve Wynne himself explain how it
happened.
"A couple of months after the '77 TT,
we went to Silverstone for Roger Nicholls to ride in the
TT F1 support race at the British GP. In the paddock there
I was introduced to Mike Hailwood, who was visiting Britain
from New Zealand, where he'd been living since retiring
from Formula 1 car racing after his 1974 smash at the Nurburgring.
He sees the Ducati, slings his leg over it, and says "This
is the kind of old fashioned bike I understand - wouldn't
mind doing another TT on this!" Half-jokingly, I say
"Why don't you?!" - and with just a few words
and a hand shake, the deal is done, for a paltry, completely
nominal rider's fee of £1000 - I used to think it
was even less, but I just discovered our single-sheet contract,
complete with Mike's witticisms scrawled on it, in a drawer!
But essentially Mike just wanted to have an enjoyable ride
back in the Island he loved racing in - his plan was originally
to ride under an assumed name, thinking nobody would realise
it was him: some hope...!"
"There were ten months to go before the
TT, but I immediately contacted Ducati: this time there
had to be no cock-up with last minute arrivals - it must
be two brand-new bikes, not a single worn-out endurance
racer with no spares. It was agreed however that I must
pay for the bikes, one up front and the other at the end
of the year, and they arrived in plenty of time, painted
in NCR colours of red and silver, before the end of 1977.
In fact, there were three - one each for Hailwood and Roger
Nicholls, who after his efforts in the previous two races
I must admit was our best hope for victory, since you must
remember Mike hadn't raced a bike at top level for seven
years, and a third for Mike's Australian mate Jim Scaysbrook,
who was mainly responsible for him taking up bike racing
again. This bike was bought and paid for by the Aussies,
and went Down Under after the race, where it still is (owned
by Bill McDonald in Brisbane, still in its original red
and silver colours - AC). We however painted the two Sports
bikes red and green, a colour scheme I designed from a can
of Castrol oil, who were Mike's main sponsor - it had nothing
to do with the Italian 'tricolore', which was just a happy
coincidence, even if the people at Ducati preferred to think
otherwise! I do know that when they launched the Mike Hailwood
Replica 900SS streetbike the following year, neither Mike
nor I were paid any royalties on it, even though this was
the model whose commercial success was such (over 7000 were
built and sold over a seven-year period - AC) that it bailed
the state-owned factory out of near-certain bankruptcy -
in Castrol colours!"
"Having got the bikes early meant I could
prepare them very carefully, reworking the heads with larger
valves and changing pistons, ignition, clutch and most importantly
the gear cluster, which was the real achilles heel of a
racing Ducati at that time. This was achieved courtesy of
a contact of Mike's from his F1 car days, Hewland Gears,
who made all the gearboxes for the British F1 teams. But
whereas this service would normally have commanded a five-figure
fee, such was the esteem Hailwood was held in by car people
as well as bikers that Mike Hewland redesigned and manufactured
the new gear ratios free of charge, and the information
was passed on to Ducati equally gratis, for them to incorporate
much of the design into future road models."
"During pre-race testing and TT practice
our Sports-tuned engine proved fast and reliable - Mike
topped the TT F1 leaderboard with a new lap record at 111
mph, yet was convinced he'd only done 105 mph or so because
the Ducati felt so easy and relaxing to ride. Two race engineers
had turned up from the Ducati factory to observe and help
out, Franco Farne and Giuliano Pedretti. Farne became concerned
over the high mileage this engine had done in practice,
so persuaded me to fit a new one they had brought over with
them, which Mike did a solitary lap with on Friday night,
the day before the race. In the event, though good enough
to win the race this proved much slower than our motor,
and blew up when the bottom bevel gear on the rear cylinder
disintegrated just as Mike shut off to cross the finish
line and win! I didn't even know this till I got the bike
home, because under FIM pressure there was a strict noise
control at the TT that year, and all the finishers were
supposed to be tested at the end of the race. There was
some doubt whether the Ducati would pass, even with the
Triumph silencers we'd grafted on to the Lafranconi exhaust
meggas, but the noise meter man didn't fancy being lynched
for being the one to disqualify Hailwood after his famous
TT comeback win, so as I pushed the bike back to the parc
ferme I was greeted with the rhetorical question that "the
engine won't start, will it?!" to which I was happy
to agree - except that, had I but known it then, it was
quite true!!"
"I've never considered myself to be superstitious,
but this was one occasion that makes me wonder. Though it
was a dream come true to win a TT, and especially with Mike
Hailwood riding my bike, the pressure and responsibility
were immense. I had many hundreds of letters before the
race from Hailwood fans, many threatening to hold me personally
responsible if Mike were to be killed or injured - honestly!
Motor Cycle News printed a photo of the bike back to front
without the bodywork on, which gave the mistaken impression
the sump plug was wired up the wrong way: this caused 40
or 50 people - not just two or three! - to write or phone
telling me of the apparent error. The atmosphere throughout
practice was electric, because Honda were going all out
to retain their title, and besides Phil Read had the likes
of Tom Herron, Tony Rutter, John Williams and Helmut Dahne
on their own works bikes or on dealer entries, with only
our Ducatis and Chas Mortimer on a Suzuki to stop them.
But there was some good natured banter between Read and
Hailwood, and just before the start of the race, Phil came
over to wish Mike and myself good luck, and in typical cheeky
form suggested I ought to support him by wearing a Phil
Read T-shirt! I did in fact take off my Sports Motorcycles/Hailwood
T-shirt and spent the whole of the race in the pits apparently
supporting our greatest rival, till at the end of the last
lap, Mike's light came on at Signpost Corner miles in the
lead, to tell us we were almost home and dry. Only then,
realising I still had the Phil Read T-shirt on, did I start
to take it off to don our own team colours, ready to welcome
Mike as the victor. But Giuliano Pedretti, the Ducati works
mechanic, stopped me as I did so: "Keep it on,"
he said, "or it may cause bad luck." I wonder
to this day, if I'd removed the T-shirt, would the timing
gear have broken at Governor's Bridge just a few hundred
yards from the finish, instead of just on the line?! Am
I superstitious now? Maybe just a little...."
"Having got the bikes early meant I could
prepare them very carefully, reworking the heads with larger
valves and changing pistons, ignition, clutch and most importantly
the gear cluster, which was the real achilles heel of a
racing Ducati at that time. This was achieved courtesy of
a contact of Mike's from his F1 car days, Hewland Gears,
who made all the gearboxes for the British F1 teams. But
whereas this service would normally have commanded a five-figure
fee, such was the esteem Hailwood was held in by car people
as well as bikers that Mike Hewland redesigned and manufactured
the new gear ratios free of charge, and the information
was passed on to Ducati equally gratis, for them to incorporate
much of the design into future road models."
"During pre-race testing and TT practice
our Sports-tuned engine proved fast and reliable - Mike
topped the TT F1 leaderboard with a new lap record at 111
mph, yet was convinced he'd only done 105 mph or so because
the Ducati felt so easy and relaxing to ride. Two race engineers
had turned up from the Ducati factory to observe and help
out, Franco Farne and Giuliano Pedretti. Farne became concerned
over the high mileage this engine had done in practice,
so persuaded me to fit a new one they had brought over with
them, which Mike did a solitary lap with on Friday night,
the day before the race. In the event, though good enough
to win the race this proved much slower than our motor,
and blew up when the bottom bevel gear on the rear cylinder
disintegrated just as Mike shut off to cross the finish
line and win! I didn't even know this till I got the bike
home, because under FIM pressure there was a strict noise
control at the TT that year, and all the finishers were
supposed to be tested at the end of the race. There was
some doubt whether the Ducati would pass, even with the
Triumph silencers we'd grafted on to the Lafranconi exhaust
meggas, but the noise meter man didn't fancy being lynched
for being the one to disqualify Hailwood after his famous
TT comeback win, so as I pushed the bike back to the parc
ferme I was greeted with the rhetorical question that "the
engine won't start, will it?!" to which I was happy
to agree - except that, had I but known it then, it was
quite true!!"
"I've never considered myself to be superstitious,
but this was one occasion that makes me wonder. Though it
was a dream come true to win a TT, and especially with Mike
Hailwood riding my bike, the pressure and responsibility
were immense. I had many hundreds of letters before the
race from Hailwood fans, many threatening to hold me personally
responsible if Mike were to be killed or injured - honestly!
Motor Cycle News printed a photo of the bike back to front
without the bodywork on, which gave the mistaken impression
the sump plug was wired up the wrong way: this caused 40
or 50 people - not just two or three! - to write or phone
telling me of the apparent error. The atmosphere throughout
practice was electric, because Honda were going all out
to retain their title, and besides Phil Read had the likes
of Tom Herron, Tony Rutter, John Williams and Helmut Dahne
on their own works bikes or on dealer entries, with only
our Ducatis and Chas Mortimer on a Suzuki to stop them.
But there was some good natured banter between Read and
Hailwood, and just before the start of the race, Phil came
over to wish Mike and myself good luck, and in typical cheeky
form suggested I ought to support him by wearing a Phil
Read T-shirt! I did in fact take off my Sports Motorcycles/Hailwood
T-shirt and spent the whole of the race in the pits apparently
supporting our greatest rival, till at the end of the last
lap, Mike's light came on at Signpost Corner miles in the
lead, to tell us we were almost home and dry. Only then,
realising I still had the Phil Read T-shirt on, did I start
to take it off to don our own team colours, ready to welcome
Mike as the victor. But Giuliano Pedretti, the Ducati works
mechanic, stopped me as I did so: "Keep it on,"
he said, "or it may cause bad luck." I wonder
to this day, if I'd removed the T-shirt, would the timing
gear have broken at Governor's Bridge just a few hundred
yards from the finish, instead of just on the line?! Am
I superstitious now? Maybe just a little...."
"The following weekend we went from the
world's longest race circuit to one of the shortest, Mallory
Park, and refitted the original Sports engine that Mike
had practised with in the Island for him to ride the bike
in the Post-TT meeting's TT Formula 1 British title round,
in which he beat future British champion John Cowie on the
P&M Kawasaki, as well as Read and all his TT rivals
once again. In some ways I regard this as an even greater
feat than the TT victory, because the Japanese bikes were
nimbler and had better accleration than the lusty, long-wheelbase
Ducati, which made them better suited to such a short, frantic
circuit - but Mike's brilliance made the difference. We
did two more British TT F1 races together that year, at
Donington where he crashed in the lead and wrote off the
fairing - the crowd reacted like locusts, swarming all over
the machine to pick up pieces of the broken bodywork to
keep as souvenirs! - and the other at Silverstone in the
British GP support race, where Cowie got his revenge and
Mike finished an outpowered third on such an outright speed
circuit."
"At the end of 1978 the Hailwood Ducati
was sold unrestored and as used - complete with Donington
crash scrapes - to a Japanese collector. This was the same
engine and chassis - both bearing nos. 088238 - that Mike
had used at Mallory, Donington and Silverstone, and the
same chassis he won the TT with, too - and in my book, it's
the chassis that determines a bike's identity: Mike Hailwood
sat in that seat to win the TT, and nobody else did so on
a race track after that round at Silverstone, till you came
to ride it here at Mallory today. The second bike that Roger
Nicholls rode in the TT (he retired with, of all things,
a broken oil level inspection window) was purchased from
the factory by the then British Ducati importers, who then
refused to sell it on to me as my original deal with Ducati
had been, but instead turned it into the first 'forgery'.
They later sold it to a German enthusiast together with
a letter certifying it was the Hailwood bike, which it most
assuredly never was - Mike never even rode a single practice
lap on it, and the importers in any case had no involvement
whatsoever with our race effort, so couldn't have known
which bike was which."
"I still owned not only the blown-up
TT-winning engine, but also the disastrous full-works 950F1
bike ridden to fifth place in the 1979 TT by Mike, which
I'd been too disgusted with to dispose of - though precisely
why is another, even longer story! In 1982, I decided to
enter myself in the Daytona BoTT race, using the 1979 chassis
which Ron Williams of Maxton had by now transformed from
a camel into a thoroughbred handling-wise, in which I installed
the 1978 engine that I'd heavily modified while rebuilding
it, in search of more power. The blow-up had meant that
timing gears, crank, big bore pistons and cylinders, valves,
gearbox etc. were all replacements, which basically only
meant the crankcases and head castings were original Hailwood
TT items,even if modified inside. However, I'd overdone
the tuning, and at Daytona the crankcases split, which being
special sandcast units were irreplaceable, and unrepairable.
For a second time the engine was cast under a bench!"
"A year or so later the next 'con' artist
appeared on the scene, contacting me from the USA purporting
to be the world's biggest Hailwood fan. Did I even have
just a nut or bolt off the original Hailwood bike lying
around which he could have to worship? Being a gullible
type, I informed him that I still had the TT-winning engine,
even though it was scrap and heavily modified, plus a spare
wheel and a damaged fork slider that apart from the trashed
fairing was the only casualty of the Donington crash. I
sold him the stuff for just a few pounds - then a year or
so later I find 'The Original TT-Winning Mike Hailwood Ducati'
has gone up for sale in the USA, completely cloned from
just a cracked crankcase and a broken fork leg! After correspondence
between myself and the buyer of this fake, the purchaser
has now sued the man who created it, and the bike itself
is now in the hands of a third party, who has now broken
it up and is offering the cracked crankcases and other modified
parts for sale!"
"Meanwhile, the genuine bike reappeared
from Japan in 1996, and was sold at auction in Los Angeles
to the present owners, who have generously insisted it be
returned to the race track this year, to honour the 20th
anniversary of Mike's victories. You're doing the honouring
here at Mallory Park, while Phil Read will ride it in the
TT Parade Lap - and I can assure everyone who sees the bike
or reads this article that this is indeed the genuine Hailwood
Ducati, and as the mug who sold to to Japan for £5000
in 1978 and tried unsuccessfully to buy it back at auction
in 1996 with a failed bid of £80,000, I have absolutely
no axe to grind about its authenticity. In fact, of all
people involved, I'd be very unlikely to try to put up that
much money to buy a forgery! The original engine with matching
numbers - which Mike used in practice at the TT and won
the race with at Mallory - that came with the bike when
new is still installed in it, together with every nut, bolt
and washer that he raced with during the 1978 season. Odd
bits do exist elsewhere which were used at some stage by
Mike, but that's the nature of racing's wear and tear. This
motorcycle is history on wheels, and to see it being used
in something approaching anger here today, at the scene
of its last race victory, has been very moving - as well
as a vivid reminder of how much of a loss it is that Mike
can't be with us himself at the TT to commemorate what is
arguably his most famous victory."
© Alan
Cathcart. All Rights Reserved.
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