It had been a harried week prior, preparing my own motorcycles and transporting two of Paul Adam's Norton racers ('37 350ccManx Grand Prix and '52 500cc Daytona Manx - see top pic of loaded Sprinter), from his home in Shingle Springs CA, to Half Moon Bay. I had only arrived from my European tour of all things motorcycle the prior Sunday, so was juggling work and family needs with show prep. I borrowed a trailer for my two Nortons, as the van was full of Manx, and dropped Darcy at the front of the Ritz to check in, while I unloaded the bikes into
Ed Gilbertson (chief judge of both the Legend and Pebble Beach Concours) gave us a rundown of the 'rules', ie guidelines on how we were to score each machine, and standardized deductions for certain items (3 points off for powder coating! 1/2 point off for clearcoating over a transfer with no 'witness' mark of the transfer's thickness!). The judging pool grew to 42 this year, and although most had 8-10 machines in their roster, I had the same number as the previous two years - 14 bikes to judge between 9am and 11:30, when our tallies needed delivering to Ed and his wife Sherie. In that 20 min per machine, my partner Mark Upham and I had to look over every nut, bolt, washer, wire, cable, etc, on the machine, making notes on a dozen categories (paint, plating, fasteners, engine, gearbox, frame, forks, wheels, controls, electrics, rubber, etc). The meeting wasn't too painful, and only a couple of fights broke out; one instigated by George Cohen concerning the necessity of safety wiring on racing machine (or at least, holes in important nuts which COULD be wired); the other fight concerned paint.
Fight! Over! Paint!
Our judge's reception was all schmoozing and champagne, as this was our first chance to catch up with familiar faces, as most had been present the prior year, either as a judge or entrant (some of the entrants had morphed into judges this year). And, to be honest, this begins what is the most pleasurable part of my whole motorcycling
Saturday began at 5:30am with an unwelcome wakeup call from the Ritz; although some judges had wisely retired early after our
Saturday morning is the best time to be on the grounds; bikes in the fog make an eerie scene, and at 6am very few people are around, and it's a
From a three-seater bicycle to a
Last morning pic - my '26 Norton Model 25, with two of Paul Adams' Nortons, at risk of golf ball damage at the edge of the golf course. Yes, there were golfers at play, although this year they had to skip a hole and drive around the motorcycles.
At 6:50am I had to stop snapping pix and run back to the Ritz for our Judge's assembly, at which we were handed our scoring sheets and exhorted once again to have them back by noon.
Top judges table photo; Don Danmeier (founder of the Clubman's Show), Jim Thomas (Pebble Beach judge), Pete Young, Jim Lattin (early motorcycle specialist).
Second table pic; George Beale (constructor of replica Honda 6's and Benelli 4's), Mark Upham (British Only Austria), Mark Wilsmore (Ace Cafe), and 'Red' Fred Johansen (on the board of the AMCA).
Here's a better look at Pete Young's fancy bow tie; check out the later pic with his straw boater hat and check pants - very Gatsby, barring the sneakers... Saddle shoes next year, Pete!
At 9am sharp I'm out on the field with Mark Upham, and our first stop is the '37 Ariel of Kim Young, which she and Pete finished a few nights prior. Full disclosure; I sold them the bike as a pile of bits, about 10 years ago. They're
Next came Fred Meyer's 1948 Sunbeam S7, a very early production model with some features unique to only a few of the earliest of these inline-twin 500cc ohc models. This bike was hard to fault, with lots of New Old Stock parts
Until we came across John Menefee from Tenessee and his 1942 BMW R75 750cc ohv twin outfit, with a lockable differential to the driven sidecar wheel, complete with MG machine gun ('Does it work?' 'Only on judges!'), saddle bags, gas mask, wehrmacht helmet and leather coat, hand grenades, jackboots, etc, etc. Period accessories (including sidecars) don't add any points
Next bike (I didn't photograph all 14) was the 1937 BMW R66 600cc ohv, which was another near-faultless restoration. Owner Evan Bell cheerily showed his original tool roll - tools and a manual (if originally provided) are expected to be with the bike during judging, and most
Darryl Richman brought his 1928 BMW R52 500cc sv, complete with Bayerische hat. I have a soft spot for 'flat tank' BMW's, having owned an R63 (although it was a bad restoration and I sold it), and I had the week prior seen the best example ever in Leichtenstein - an original condition 1928 factory racer (for a later post). Darryl rides his R52, which brings up another judging point; no points reduction for road wear or evidence of use. As several of the First in Class winners showed, evidence of use isn't a handicap at all! So, take your show bike out for a ride, and give the rest of us a treat to see it.
There were other bikes in our class (late Rudge Ulster, Ariel Square 4, etc), but things got difficult when we encountered
The difficulty? We had 3 bikes of similar quality; Sunbeam S7, BMW R66, and Vincent Shadow, all rare, all running beatifully, all within 1/2 point of each other. They were actually
The judge's work isn't over though, as the Class winning bikes had to be rounded up by the Class Hosts (volunteers who liason between the judges and owners, ie finding them when they win!).
First up were the Special Awards and Industry Awards, which included the Custom Culture prize, going to actor Jason Lee's Bullet Falcon custom, built by Ian Barry and Amaryllis Knight (pictured in a huddle before riding to the podium) around a 1950 Triumph. This bike garnered quite a bit of press before the Legends as a 'new breed' of custom - let's hope so, as the old breed is tiresome. Kudos to the special builder who creates art which can be properly ridden!
Here's what I was referring to as 'evidence of road use', Gus Veratakas' 1969 Norton Mercury 650cc parallel twin. I do believe Gus is the original owner,
Mike Hailwood's Honda 500cc dohc 4-cylinder GP racer also won a 1st, and sounded magnificent. Here it's attended by an old friend, 'Nobby' Clarke, who spun the wrenches on this machine when it raced under Mike the Bike. A poignant moment.
Happy local couple Toastacia Boyd and Charlie O'Hanlon won a 1st with their '69 Honda CB450 Police model - they were thrilled! Charlie runs THE local vintage Honda shop, and did a very nice restoration, with a lot of correct and rare parts.
When all the Class winners were assembled, the judges were at it one final time, for the worst task of all; choosing Best in Show from these 14 beautiful bikes (note the fellow behind the third BMW - that's Tim Green, 'greenie' to you ebayers, and you've probably bought a book or two from him! Also, Ian Barry is contemplating Bossier's Shadow).
Here's how it works; each judging team had a Team Chief, whose job it was to vote for Best in Show with a small ballot. All 14 team Chiefs looked earnestly at the bikes lined up, as we hadn't until this moment known the winners of other classes. As we had been busy judging our own class all morning, the other 13 machines were new to us, and our ballots had to be at the podium in 30 minutes. Difficult work - note
Our ballots are handed over to Ed Gilbertson, who adds them up and declares Best in Show. This year's winner was the anti-restoration; a 1908 'Torpedo tank' Indian racer, owned by Vince Martinico, in original and unrestored condition. Ironically, as it has no clutch, it couldn't be
over this incredibly rare, probably unique machine from the second year of Indian's v-twin production - the bike is a fully documented factory racer. The fact that it remained unrestored and in very good condition is remarkable, and the bike crackles like a gattling gun when it's pedalled into life (that's right, we gave the big prize to a moped...). If you look closely at the photo, you'll see two long tubes connected to the front frame tube - the red one is the battery ('accumulator'), and the black tube is the ignition coil. It looks humble in photographs, but the little bike had a Presence. Remarkably, it won 4 awards at the Legends, from four different sets of judges, which is testament to the esteem in which the bike is held. I saw Vince turn down a large cash offer for the Indian, later that afternoon... but I think he preferred a victory hug from the 'umbrella girls' (Kim and Crystal again!)
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