
Cycle News is gone for now. Let's hope it can be revived somehow.
I’ll never forget the first day I saw it. It was at England Cycle on West 10th Street in Indianapolis. I had been riding my Honda CL100 up and down the trails along the railroad tracks on the Westside of Indianapolis getting roosted by the occasional Husky being tested after service from the dealership. I was probably 13 or 14 when I walked into the showroom and milled around looking at the Husqvarnas, Moto Guzzis and Yamahas. I ventured up to the parts counter and there it was… Cycle News.
I picked up a copy and started leafing through it and my eyes opened wide. Yes there was the occasional race coverage in the glossies in the mid-1970s, but here was cover-to-cover racing and the races just happened the week before! I was hooked. I dug deep in my jeans and fished out 50 cents and bought the issue. I rolled it up, tucked it in my pants and rode home to read it.
I don’t remember the specific race coverage of the very first issue of Cycle News I ever bought, but I recall a story about a Hare Scrambles race down at Stoney Lonesome in Southern Indiana and I recognized some of the names of local riders. If I recall there was an interview with a national rider and I became a fan of rider profiles, something I most enjoy to this day.
As a kid I didn’t have the bucks to subscribe to Cycle News (it was Cycle News East to be specific), but when I had an extra 50 cents I rode down to England Cycle and picked up an issue. It was the start of a love affair that lasted nearly 40 years.
That love affair just might have ended yesterday when Cycle News closed its doors after nearly a half century of being America’s motorcycle racing’s publication of record.
In the early 1980s – my very brief WERA road racing career ran into a little problemo called lack of funding. I really enjoyed road racing, the people involved, many of which were friends, so I thought maybe I could cover the races for Cycle News. Associate Editor Gary Van Voorhis gave me my first chance at covering a race and I’ll never forget the thrill when I picked up that issue with my first byline.
In nearly 30 years of contributing to Cycle News I guesstimate I’ve written over 600 articles, including everything you could imagine from race coverage, rider profiles, product and book reviews, obituaries and most recently I filed the Archives column for over four years.
So many of the journalist and photographers in motorcycling worked for Cycle News at one point or another. When I started there were still two editions, Cycle News West and East. I worked for editors Jack Mangus, Gary Van Voorhis, John Ulrich and Paul Carruthers. I only ever visited the classic old office on Signal Hill in Long Beach once or twice and never saw their newer office.
I, like everyone else involved with the publication, have ideas how they could have changed things to survive, but the bottom line is that Cycle News was a very successful and profitable publication that had a number of small things gradually mount up to catch it out when the Recession hit.
Times were so good in the 1990s and early 2000s that CN Publishing expanded and bought new offices with dreams of becoming a publishing giant. They bought the offices at the height of the real estate boom, so there was no opportunity to survive the downturn by borrowing on its property. When the factories largely dropped out of racing it affected Cycle News, a racing publication, more than other motorcycle books because of the drastic drop in win ads. Also Cycle News used to have the industry’s best classified ads. Free online classifieds wiped that out. Management also seemed slow and or reluctant to change the way it did business in the rapidly changing media landscape.
Perhaps more than anything time passed Cycle News by. How often have you heard someone say, Cycle News used to be the first place to find out what happened at the races? Well don’t look now, but that hasn’t been the case for better than 15 years.
Cycle News is not alone in the industry as a victim of the Great Recession. Buell most notably bit the dust, although maybe not permanently. And that’s my hope for Cycle News. I hope that somehow, someone can pick up the publication from the ashes and revive it. The industry needs a book like Cycle News and I’m certain it will be supported; maybe just not at the level the current publication is accustomed to.
I talked to one longtime publishing insider who said that Cycle News’ demise presents a tremendous opportunity for someone out there. The concept is still viable if a party can come in and run it more efficiently and creatively.
Let’s hope that a knight in shining armor is thinking about this and decides to come in to save the day for all of us.
Excellent write about Cycle News. I have been a long time subscriber since the 1950’s. I was a farm kid in Eagle Grove, Iowa when I saw my first issue at a Triumph dealership. Since my brother and I had just purchased a TR6 to scramble, we had to have this publication. I looked forward to every week’s issue. It was read from cover to cover. I was particularly interested in flat track racing and this magazine gave me the opportunity to follow my heroes. Carol Resweber and Joe Leonard, were the Harley guys I followed. Cycle News made me aware of the Peoria TT in neighboring IL. We would go every year to watch all the big name racers run this event. Leonard always had a beautiful babe with him. That impressed me as a young kid. When I graduated from college in 1961 and moved to CA I was able to follow and attend some of the Ascot races watching Dick Mann, Al Gunter, Neal Keene, Mert Lawwill, Sammy Tanner, Eddie Mulder, etc . It was terrific and CN always had such great coverage and pictures. When I moved back to IA in the late 60’s CN let me continue to follow national racing. I still read every page even though I’m a 73 year old guy. The Archives column was my favorite read along with Looking Back. For the past 10 years my first read of the day is the CN website. I suppose that will be a thing of the past also. The death of CN will be like losing an old friend. You are a great writer, Cal, covering motorcycling. I hope I shall be able to read more of your work as time progresses. Thanks for many good memories. Best of Luck to you!
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Dale,
Your memory of Cycle News going back to the 1950s is a little off (it started I believe around 1965). But I do appreciate the sentiment and the kind words about Archives.
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Mea Culpa – after decades (I may have some from early 70’s) I dropped my subscription about a year ago.
That said, the internet slammed them, your work here as just one example.
I still get “AutoWeek” (started with Competition Press in the 60’s) – but it’s a few min read and toss
Tried Cycle News online “page turner” but it didn’t “get it” – failed to fit the media
Thought : do you have ownership of the history page pieces you use to do?
Until I dropped the subscription, I would often tear those out, toss the rest … would be nice online book
I’m also experimenting with iPad as book reader, not for Pete Lyons “Can Am” but for “text” books, more think pieces than “pleasure” reading
Ciao
Chip
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Chip
I agree the online version didn’t give me the same pleasure as the real thing. Allan Girdler told me that with print publications you have something that is real, tangible, something you can hold in your hand, collect on a bookshelf for future reference, etc. Things online are cool, but they’re in the ether. They can disappear tomorrow. I look at all the excellent history content the old AMA website had at the tap of a keystroke it was gone. Never to be found again.
My dream is that Sharon would make a deal with Google Books to put all the old issues online.
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Sad day that Cycle News is going away. Back in the 80’s they gave alot of us old WERA racers some press, something we can frame and brag about. And of course Glen Isles and Larry Lawrence had alot to do with that.
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Say it isn’t so, I love Cycle News!
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OMG.
I simply can’t believe it. I’ve been subscribing since the late Seventies. Lately (like the past 10+ years), I’ve always renewed my subscription at either World Superbike or MotoGP in Monterey (they give out good swag when you renew at the races).
What the HELL am I going to read when I’m dropping off the kids???
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