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The
Olden Golden Days
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Max
Grosskreutz
Max
Grosskreutz, born in 1906, was one of the very first Australian Speedway
champions
(1927). He remains among a rare breed of leg-trailing heroes, during
the sport's 'dirt track' infancy in the 1920's. Although his best
years were before WWII (when he rated among the
very best in the world), he returned to thetrack after the war, finally
retiring due to injury in 1948. He was 42. Max passed on in 1994,
aged 88. I feel privileged to not only have met the man, but to have
written a final story about his exciting and unique career in speedway.
They don't make them like Max anymore - a true legend if there ever
was one.
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Vic
Duggan
The
legend says: 'World Speedway Champion, Vic Duggan'. Though Vic - magnificent
as he was - never took speedway's supreme title, he was a five-times
Australian champion in a period when engine and distance categories
varied. His career, which began at
Sydney's Speedway Royale in 1937, was promising from the start. After
a short pre-war apprenticeship in England with Hackney, Bristol and
Wimbledon, he returned to Britain to ride for Harringay (whose colours
he is wearing in this picture) in 1947, sweeping all before him and
proving to be sensationally near-unbeatable. The following year he won
the equivalent of the world crown by taking the Speedway Riders Championship
against the world's best at London's Wembley Stadium. Revered still
by those enthusiasts fortunate enough to have seen him ride, he is now
in his mid-eighties and lives in quiet retirement in Queensland.
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Jack
Parker
Once
described as the 'champion of champions', Jack Parker was certainly
the most charismatic English speedway rider in the history of the
sport. He began riding at High Beech, the birthplace of British speedway,
at the beginning in 1928 and was one of the first Englishmen to challenge
the supremacy of the visiting Australian
experts. The quintessential team captain, for England - he rode in
96 tests for his country - and his clubs, Coventry, Southampton, Clapton,
Harringay and Belle Vue. He led numerous international tours to Australia
and was renowned for his dominance in match races, holding the British
Match Race Championship Golden Helmet for so long in the late 1940s
that it became known as 'Parker's Pension'. Another outstanding performer
never to have won a world title, he was the Star Champion in 1934
and the 1947 British Champion. Parker's name also appears four times
on the Australian individual championships roll of honour.
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