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Murray Walker: Bikes are best!

Murray Walker at Thruxton
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British Superbikes » Murray Walker: Bikes are best!

Tuesday, 22nd April 2008

"There's nothing like it in mechanical sport for excitement and drama, motorcycle racing is very much number one as far as I'm concerned" - Murray Walker.

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Murray Walker may be best known as the voice of Formula One, but as far as he's concerned even the pinnacle of four-wheel motorsport doesn't come close to the excitement and drama of motorcycle racing.

Walker, born in 1923, was present at last weekend's Thruxton round of the British Superbike Championship as a guest of Rizla Suzuki, where he was asked to compare the two disciplines.

"I've never made any secret of the fact - and I never will - that bikes are closest to my heart," he replied. "They always have been. My father raced professionally. The first race I went to was the 1925 Isle of Man TT, when I was still in my mother's arms, and without wishing to sound disparaging - because it's certainly not meant to be - motorcyclists make the car blokes look like a load of wimps!

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"They're not of course. But in motorcycle racing you get very close contact, the riders have the temerity to pass and re-pass each other, and the power-to-weight ratio - the performance of the bikes - is absolutely incredible.

"There's nothing like it in mechanical sport for excitement and drama, so it's very much number one as far as I'm concerned."

Walker's words come hot on the heels of similar comments by former F1 driver Jonathan Palmer, whose Motorsport Vision company now promotes BSB.

Palmer described motorcycle racers as 'real heroes' during an interview with Crash.net, while even seven-time F1 world champion Michael Schumacher has recently been enticed by the unique challenge of two-wheeled racing.

Walker briefly raced motorcycles himself, but his commentary career proved much more fruitful. Murray made his debut in 1949 and only brought his full time career to a close at the 2001 US Grand Prix.

"I've been coming to Thruxton for nearly 60 years. I remember in 1951, I think it was, Geoff Duke on the works Norton was here and was given a hell of a run by a new young chap whose name was John Surtees," recalled Murray. "John Surtees went on to become a multiple motorcycle world champion and the only man who has also won the Formula One World Championship."
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Murray Walker at Thruxton
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