Category Archives: Motor racing

All what has to do with racing.

Ice racing

Ice speedway is a developed form of motorcycle speedway racing, featuring racing on frozen surfaces. The sport uses bikes enhanced for the terrain. Participants can compete at international level.

The majority of Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme sanctioned team and individual meetings are held in Russia, Sweden and Finland, but events are also held in the Czech Republic, Germany, the Netherlands, and occasionally other countries. Countries that dominated and won the majority of titles in Individual Ice Racing World Championship (held since 1966) and Team Ice Racing World Championship (held since 1979) were the USSR and since 1991—Russia.

Nikolay Krasnikov is a Russian twenty times ice speedway world champion. Krasnikov won eight consecutive Individual Ice Speedway World Championship titles from 2005 until 2012 and twelve Team Ice Racing World Championship titles with Russia from 2004 until 2016. He is regarded as one of the leading ice speedway riders of all-time.

photo: Krzysztof Węgrzwieniecki

Sidecar champions

from left to right: Robert Grogg and Andreas Grabner (Switzerland), Sergey Shcherbinin and Boris Poganovsky (USSR).
Grogg/Grabner crew won the stage of the FIM Cup in sidecar motocross class. Shcherbinin/Poganovsky took 2nd place, riding Ural-900 motorcycle.
Denmark 1973
Photo by Chris Somers
source: Foto magazine MOTOR 1973, Andrey Spitsyn

Olev Kaseorg

OLEV KASEORG

Olev Kaseorg (08/04/1927 – 08/06/1955) Estonia
Two-times road racing Champion of the USSR.
During training, while testing a new motorcycle on the Leningrad Highway, he crashed into a truck that suddenly turned.

Anke-Eve Goldmann

The story of this remarkable woman, Anke-Eve Goldmann, must be preserved for history and never forgotten.

She was a teacher, journalist, designer and motorcycle racer. Anke-Eve Goldmann, was born 27 November 1930 in Germany (at the time of this writing her age is now 91 years and still  living in Germany). With a passion for motorcycling she became a 21st Century icon, 2 metres tall, strong, independent and beautiful, “a leather-clad goddess on two wheels”.

She was a trailblazing icon for women motorcyclists. She just wanted to ride. She entered an arrangement with the German garment manufacturer Harro to make her a custom one-piece leather riding suit for herself. She went on to launch her own range of custom Harro leatherwear and  accessories.

Anke-Eve Goldmann became known simply as “AEG’. She was drawn to the BMW marque in its golden years and was supported by the German  manufacturer.

Although AEG never had an official sponsorship with BMW,  the factory knew who she was, and supplied her with the first of their new models. It was reported she received the second R69 (R69S?) off the assembly line. She remained faithful to BMW until the early 1970s.

She competed in endurance and circuit racing at the Nurburgring and Hockenheim ring but being a woman, was barred from higher level competitions.

She wrote for motorcycle journals and magazines around the world, including Das Motorrad, Moto Revue and Cycle World among others. She wrote about her riding and racing experiences, European race reports etc.

She stunned the world with her article documenting Soviet Women’s sports motorcycle racing history of the 1950s/60s. It was incredulous for a West German woman to document Soviet motorsports in 1962, a defiant act as the Berlin Wall was being built. With Berlin the focal point of a possible nuclear war between superpowers, her article never appeared in any European magazine, only Cycle World in the USA published her article ”SOVIET ROAD RACING CHAMPIONSHIPS FOR WOMEN” By Anke-Eve Goldmann, in its October 1962 edition.

She was a feminist before that label was popularized. The ridicule she experienced being shut out of racetracks because of her sex, for daring to be a woman on a fast motorcycle, able to handle herself and her machine better than many men, she was the first and only Western journalist to document Soviet women’s racing without the need to comment on the irony of women in the Soviet Union being free to race motorcycles in organized competition, whilst she in the “free” West was not.

In 1958 she helped found the Woman’s International Motorcycle Association in Europe.

Her last motorcycle was a MV Augusta.

She gave up motorcycling after the death of a close friend.

Goldmann was the inspiration for the main character “Rebecca” in the popular book The Motorcycle (1963) by her friend and author Andre Pieyre dr Mandiargues. The book was adapted for the 1968 film “The Girl on a Motorcycle” starring Marianne Faithfull.

sources: The Vintagent, rideapart, blackarrow, Pinterest, Facebook, Cycle World, Das Motorrad, Silodrome, tomorrowstarted, encyclo, alchetron, bmwsporttouring, Reddit, gearchic, tumgur, vipfaq, ewikibg, imdb, wn, plaggio, scoop, xrv, motociclismo, 

If you search for Anke-Eve Goldmann you will discover much more about “AEG”. Her fame will be eternal.

This article recompiled from the archives by JD for b-Cozz.com August 2022

Finnish GP 1968

Finnish GP 1968
Agostini MV Agusta (No. 1) and Kiisa S-565 Vostok-4 (No. 11).

It was…. in 1968 when Vostoks were next seen at international races in Finland with a 500cc “S-565″, which in its design resembled a 350cc model, while it had a more sturdy chassis and 3 valves were put into each cylinder (2 intake, 1 exhaust). Kiisa was leading in the race for the whole lap when Giacomo Agostini took over and Kiisa came off track interrupted.

Eyewitness account: “I was at the Finnish GP in 1968, and saw and heard! the Vostok. It made tremendous noise and was fast. If it had been piloted by a top-notch rider, Ago would have been pressed hard”. – pkr2000dk

sources: USSR Sportsbikes, Ants Kikerpuu, bCozz archives