THE KING OF BAJA BajaRacingNews.com Gary Newsome, Publisher. Offices 23090 Ave. Cardon, Ensenada MX

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

"Who's Gonna Die?!"

marc choquette vtr racing:
In the 86 Baja 1000. A very good friend of mine was racing his quad (Barry Mancha) on or near that area and was hit head on by a spectator going backwards on the course. Mancha had 2 teams that year, one quad and one ATC team(the one I was on) Barry was severly injured by this vehical. He was coming over a jump similar to the one in the video and picture. Barry had to be airlifted out to Mercy Medical in San Diego. He was pretty beat up but survived. No more ATV racing though. He did get into a 5/1600 with Jim Fishback Jr and they did pretty good. We ended up continuing on to La Paz and won our class. Frank flew down to meet us at the finish line. Then flew back to San Diego. We drove the chase truck back and went to the hospital. It was pretty bad and I was really bummed. We won but our friend was in bad shape. We all know what happens but being on the race course going backwards is just dumb. Im not sure of the cops did anything to the guys or not.





Kent Kroeker posted the following on Race-Dezert.com. It is the best I've read on the entire situation. Kent is a former U.S. Marine pilot and was active in Score Class 30 motorcycle racing before he started KORE and now races Class 8 trucks. I am flattered he used our chance encounter in a hospital ER as an opener for his essay, after I was robbed at gunpoint in Baja in December 2002. I think Kent says it all.
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Big Picture?

About five years ago I hobbled into the Emergency Room at Balboa Naval Hospital with five broken bones in my left leg. I see my friend, Seve in the waiting room, hunched down in a wheel chair.

We looked at each other for a second and then he asked, "Baja?"

"You too?" I responded.

I had high-sided my KTM in a CODE race and he had been stabbed in the kidneys with a rifle barrel while being mugged and was getting checked for internal injuries.

Neither of us was surprised about the circumstances.

Oddly, we've both been back to Baja about a hundred times since. So has one of KORE's best drivers, Rodolfo Iribe, despite his pelvis being snapped in half, due to "Baja circumstances" beyond his control.

And we dont' go back for the trails.

We've got plenty of great trails here in the States. We go to Baja for everything that comes with it - the life experience you can't get from dinner and a movie.

And the experience isn't all negative. I don't care what people say. For every corrupt, piece of crap Mexican cop I've had to pay off and every kid I've had to chase down for stealing tools or parts, I've also got a story of incredible generosity and kindness shown by Mexican locals. Going to Baja to race is like turning up the volume of your life to #10 - because, until you get back across the border, it's everything, all the time.

It's still the Wild West and that's precisely why we continue to go there. A hundred years ago it was the same - people got gunned down in cold blood, but the reasons were different - cattle, land disputes, women. Look at the history of our American West; it's filled with violence, frontier justice and mayhem.

It's dangerous and gnarly down there. I'm not saying it's right or it's good. I'm just saying that if you're going to Baja to race, it's all or nothing. There's no "reset" button on this video game and the rollercoaster you're riding might not be up to code.

So don't bring the wife and kids.

Bring your henchmen and your war face.

Like most Third World countries, there is no Rule of Law and there are no safety standards in Mexico. You're pretty much responsible for your own security. Personally, I like the way it feels to be in a country where there is nobody you can blame for anything, and you have to pay attention all the time.

Fifteen years ago, my Dad showed up to a prerun with a SCUBA spear gun strapped on the back of his bike in plain view – like he was going to pull it out and spear banditos on the move. "I ain’t takin’ crap off nobody on this trip." He said. It was dangerous back then, and it’s dangerous now.

But for racers, I don’t think guns are the answer. A little humility and common sense are. I’ve seen Rudy get us out of big jams down there just because he knows how things work and how things are. It’s not because he uses force – he doesn’t weigh 150 lbs. It’s because he knows the culture, knows the code of ethics and common sense.

A little common sense goes a long way. I've been to a lot of countries that make the most dangerous, nasty parts of Baja look like Club Med. Only a Level Nine retard would tow a race trailer at 80 mph at night on some desert road in Djibouti, Egypt or Bahrain. Why would you do the same thing in Baja? Because it's closer to the border? Because a "sanctioned" race is taking place? Because you drive like that in Nevada?

On the way back from La Paz in ’98, my crew got run off the road by the Duralast Semi Truck. This year it was the same thing twice – once by whoever was towing the Herbst race vehicles and once by some jackass with a toy hauler. I’m talking about inches from death. Why are we doing a conservative 60 mph in the middle of the day, getting passed by Americans on the One who are easily doing 80? The biggest problems we have seen have always been from Americans. Get a clue. Narrow, raised road, no shoulder, low visibility, no medical, bandits, saboteurs, smugglers and 15 year old kids with automatic weapons . Is it prudent to drink ten Red Bulls and try to make it to the border non-stop? I’ll bet that "smelling the barn" has killed more people than anything else in Baja.

How is it that there are millions of decent people in Mexico living long, happy, productive lives without experiencing any of the problems Americans face when we're down there for two weeks? They don't have radios, sat phones, spare parts, big teams – or spear guns. They don't even have extra money. How do they do it?

Fundamentally, we race for the thrill of going to the limit - for the barbaric pleasure of keeping it pinned when everything inside you is telling you to lift. By these standards, the second you cross the border, you’re racing, whether you’re in a caged vehicle or not. But you’re not a very good racer unless you survive. So have a safety plan. Assign a safety officer. Do what he says. Follow the rules. Be humble and low key. Drive only during the day. Use static pits. Our team has a five page document that revolves entirely around safety. It is strict and absolute and has kept us safe for many years.

Mexico ain’t gonna get better because there’s nothing wrong with it.

Racers can boycott, write letters and complain, but until Americans stop using drugs, Mexico will remain as is. Just like Iraq and the Middle East in general, the situation won’t change until we stop using oil. But like we do with our foreign policy and everything else, we address symptoms instead of causes. In all these negative threads about Baja, we’re pointing fingers at the wrong people.

The point is that BIG PICTURE we, collectively both as Americans and individually as racers, we are responsible for everything - the political situation, for the tragedies, accidents and mayhem that takes place when we race. Sometimes it might not seem that way, but any mishap investigation will always point to a series of human decisions or mechanical failures that ended up in tragedy.

I apologize if this doesn't sound nice or sympathetic.

And Sal Fish is not responsible for your well being. If I stumble out of Hussongs, trip on a crack in the sidewalk and land on a rusty piece of rebar, should I call Sal and complain that the streets are not up to OSHA standards?

Despite what people say on these threads, Sal is a good man and he cares about racers. But fundamentally, Sal is responsible for organizing bad *** races that take place on dirt roads that go right through the middle of private ranches and small towns with live people in them. And for the most part these are decent, good people who happen to have been born in a wild, savage country.

And the lawless anarchy that prevails south of the border is precisely why, in the 21st century, a race like the Baja 1000 is even possible.

Someone in another thread asked the question, "Baja, yes or no?"

Well, Big Picture, for me and my team, as long as there are races we will go to Baja.

And, one day, if there are no more races, we will still go to Baja.



Ive had second thoughts. I stopped going down there quite a while ago but the lure of Baja got me again and we did the Score series in 07. I cant say we had any issues like in some of the posts. I will say this, we went down there with our "eyes wide open" and watched our stuff!!!! Baja 250, at the Corona, my brother and his buddy arrive late and sleeps in their truck in the parking lot next to all our gear. Wakes up to some commotion, some Mexican locals trying jack some stuff out of there truck. Brother jumps out and proceeds to start kicking some butt and the guys take off. The parking lot attendant, calls the cops on my brother! After we paid the loser to watch our stuff!!!! Inside job? Oh yeah!!! Along with the Grant Lenk stuff and G and R guys stuff and 2 helos in there. Just a reminder that we are very vulnerable down there. Its us against a whole lotta them. At the 500, we had our own compound at the Mona Lisa near Estero Beach. No issues at all. Very nice place and highly reccomended. at the 1000, it rained so no creepers I guess. We were at the RV park on the right as you enter Ensenada. Again, another nice place and we owned that place. Had lots of guys sleeping in their trucks and in tents so we were very secure. Best thing, IMO, is rent a house if you can. Keep a low profile when your about the town and watch your stuff. I took my son down there for the 500 and we had a blast. One of the best trips of my life. Was nice to introduce my son to Baja like that.
Now the other crap thats happened scares the heck out of me to bring him down there and or my wife. Its one thing to do it to myself but not to the family. Im also not sure if we want to risk our stuff down there. I will probably be down there again. Too many good memories and would be a shame to not use the knowledge to help some fellow racers.


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