Yvon DuHamel 1939-2021

Yvon Duhamel was the king of Production Class racing, at AMA National Road Races in the early-to-mid-1970s. The class would later evolve into AMA Superbike. Here DuHamel (17) celebrates with fellow podium finishers Reg Pridmore (87) and Hurley Wilvert (91) at Pocono in 1973.

Yvon DuHamel, one of the leading motorcycle racers of the 1960s and early 1970s, passed away today. He was 81.

Yvon is perhaps best remembered as a member of the Kawasaki factory road racing team in the early 1970s.  He rode the temperamental and brutally fast Kawasaki H2R, a 750cc three-cylinder, two-stroke racing machine, in AMA road race nationals. DuHamel competed in every style of motorcycle racing from motocross to dirt track to road racing and drag racing. He was even a leading snowmobile racer, racing factory rigs during the winter months. Yvon also competed in numerous world championship motorcycle races. He even scored a top-10 finish in his one and only NASCAR race. His sons, Miguel and Mario, became renowned road racers during the 1990s, with Miguel winning the AMA Superbike title in 1995 and becoming the all-time leading AMA Superbike race wins leader in 1998.

Yvon began his motorcycle racing career in Canada in the late 1950s and had established a reputation as a hard-charging rider when he first began racing in America in the mid-1960s.

Fred Deeley Yamaha offered DuHamel a chance to race at Daytona in the Lightweight (250cc) class on one of the new Yamaha GP bikes. He finished eighth. In 1968 and ’69, DuHamel returned to Daytona and won the Lightweight class both years. He also won the 250cc class at Indianapolis in ’69. Meanwhile, in Canada DuHamel dominated nearly every class he was racing.

In the 1968 Daytona 200, DuHamel, riding a Deeley Yamaha 350, finished second behind Harley-Davidson’s Cal Rayborn. DuHamel, along with fellow Yamaha rider Art Baumann, became the first two-stroke riders to finish on the podium in the 200.

In 1969, DuHamel earned the pole in the Daytona 200 with the first-ever qualifying lap above 150 mph (in the days when qualifying consisted of a one-lap dash around Daytona International Speedway’s NASCAR oval). But he was forced to retire from the race that year with engine trouble.

Click above to hear Yvon DuHamel talk about being the first rider to break the 150 mph barrier in Daytona 200 qualifying.

During the late ’60s, DuHamel also occasionally raced in AMA Grand National dirt-track events, as well. His best showing on the dirt was sixth in the 1968 Sacramento (California) Mile on a Yamaha, but uncompetitive dirt-track machinery kept DuHamel from ever seriously contesting the Grand National championship. By the 1970s, he was considered a road racing specialist and focused his attention in that area.

Helping to solidify his reputation as a road racer was the fact that Kawasaki hired DuHamel in 1971 to be one of its factory riders. The company was known for making fast, three-cylinder, two-stroke racers, and Kawasaki needed an expert rider to handle the explosive and narrow powerband of the bike. DuHamel proved to be one of the few riders in the world who could tame this wild beast of a machine. He gave Kawasaki its first AMA national victory in September 1971 at Talladega, Alabama. From 1971 to 1973, DuHamel was the winningest rider for Kawasaki, earning five national victories for Team Green during that period. From 1974 to 1976, DuHamel continued with Kawasaki, but a series of crashes and mechanical problems kept him from winning.

By the mid ’70s, DuHamel was busy racing overseas, as well. In 1975, he gave Kawasaki its best finish of the year in a world championship 250cc Grand Prix when he took fifth at the Dutch round. He was also a factory world endurance racer competing in the famous LeMans and Bol d’Or 24-hour endurance races on highly modified versions of the popular KZ1000 street bike.

In the United States during the mid ’70s, DuHamel won slew of production races for Kawasaki on its Z-1 in races that would eventually become AMA Superbike. By the late ’70s, with DuHamel was in his late 30s and he began to scale back his racing schedule, even though he still turned in occasional top performances namely in the Canadian round of the Formula 750 world championships, where he finished second to Gregg Hansford.

His sons were beginning to get involved in racing and DuHamel wanted to give them as much help as possible. However, DuHamel never completely retired from racing. In 1988, at the 24-hour world championship endurance race in Bol d’Or, the DuHamels (Yvon, Mario and Miguel) became the first father-and-sons team to compete in that historic event. During the mid-1990s, DuHamel returned to racing in the AMA Harley-Davidson 883 Sportster Series. He earned a few top-10 finishes, proving that he could still be competitive, even in his 50s.

Yvon is a member of the Motorcycle Hall of Fame, Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame, Canadian Motorcycle Hall of Fame, Snowmobile Hall of Fame and the Legends of Canadian Motocross.

We will pass on more information as it becomes available.

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