Self-belief … it’s a hard thing to develop and nurture, but could be the secret recipe to success on the race track.
Self belief is exactly what Taranaki brothers Darryll and Shayne King gave to Kiwi motocross hopefuls in the 1990s and it’s what Josh Coppins, Ben Townley, Daryl Hurley, Cody Cooper, Chris Birch, Stefan Merriman and Paul Whibley gave to fellow New Zealanders a decade later.
By performing among the world’s elite and then eventually becoming world elite individuals themselves, these riders have succeeded in illuminating a pathway for their comrades back home and the exploits of these trailblazers are perhaps what individuals such as current Kiwi internationals Courtney Duncan, Dylan Walsh, Josiah Natzke, Rachael Archer, Roma Edwards, Liam Draper and Hamish Macdonald are using for their motivation right now.
We’re fairly sure it gave inner strength to recent Kiwi internationals Hamish Harwood and James Scott too.
The photo here shows Motueka’s Coppins (No.6), when he led the motocross world championship standings in 2007.
Anyway, the King brothers showed it was possible to leave small-town New Plymouth and become world championship contenders.
That also, no doubt, is what riders such as Kurri Kurri’s Chad Reed and the James Bond motorcycle stuntman on Skyfall, New South Welshman Robbie Maddison, perhaps did for our trans-Tasman mates.
New Zealanders Sam Neill and Peter Jackson have done the same thing for our movie industry people, the actors and special effects crew for instance, showing them that they didn’t have to come from California or be in Hollywood to make blockbuster movies or be taken seriously by the international film industry.
We know that Shayne and Darryll King had to endure a few hardships on their way to motocross GP glory. They lived out of the back of a van and survived on a cheap diet of rice and noodles.
Shayne had one of his factory bikes stolen at one time and Darryll suffered a broken back.
Motueka man Coppins suffered a few career-threatening injuries during his time in Europe and had to fend off an unjust ‘drugs cheat’ label along the way – he’d taken some cough medicine that showed up a ‘positive’ on a test.
All the while it was his team-mate at the time pushing for sterner action to be taken against him. Coppins was this rider’s biggest threat.
Imagine the psychological stress that must have brought to Josh?
Then, to cap things off, he wasn’t even being paid as the team reneged on his salary.
Townley had a few tough days in Germany when he raced for an under-funded fledgling 125cc GP team and he was struggling just to qualify for GPs.
He’s also had his fair share of major medical traumas to deal with over the years.
But he became world champion in 2004, just three years after first arriving in Europe in 2001.
What is it about the number three? It was exactly three years after Shayne King arrived in Europe for the first time in 1993 that he became 500cc world champion in 1996.
I remember an old friend of mine in the Manawatu, former national 125cc motocross champion Phil Turnbull, giving me encouragement a few years back.
We had been riding together at the local motocross track, an after-work ritual that ensured that, even in his 40s, he could at least remain Manawatu champion and I could meantime learn a few things from the master.
He told me that even I could be national or even world champion if I wanted it badly enough, was prepared to work at it and made a few sacrifices.
He was wrong, of course. All the practice, dedication and hard work would never overcome what was lacking … actual talent.
But he was right in every other respect. Hard work and sacrifice will get you a long way and not just in motocross but in all sports and in all facets of life.
The next time you have a ‘bad day at the (MX track) office’ – stubbed your toe on the trailer, skinned your knuckles with a spanner, fallen off the bike and bent your bars – give a thought to how much worse things could have been.
Even banged your shins on the trailer tow-ball and you’ll understand the true meaning of pain.
And the next time you think you’d have a ‘bad day at the (actual) office’ – stapled your finger, given yourself a paper cut or even had a demotion – just remember what our Kiwi internationals have been through and how they still came out on top.
Quitters don’t win and winners don’t quit? What are you? Have a little self-belief.
© Opinion piece article and photo by Andy McGechan, www.BikesportNZ.com
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