Rick Johnson the Big Interview Episode 2

preview_player
Показать описание
In the second of three episodes, Rick Johnson explains why he finally left Yamaha, the big Honda bait and switch, and how good the factory Honda really was.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

They should make a movie about Rick Johnson. 1986-1988!

reneaurora
Автор

It doesn’t get any better than Rick Johnson. What an absolute pro.

cbh
Автор

RJ is one of the best ever and I think also great at sharing insights. It would be nice to hear him commentate more in the booth at the races or in podcasts etc...

markb
Автор

I’m 62 now. Love seeing the guys I looked up to as a kid

paquinsmountainmaple
Автор

I wish I could sit down and talk to RJ, listen to RJ, for hours!

robertrishel
Автор

RJ should write an autobiography/motivational book.

WeaponsEducation
Автор

"I hated running. I had big legs...I felt like a Clydesdale running, but I would do it." 😅

DS-oiwl
Автор

RJ was the best, long live the bad boy

randyfolkner
Автор

Freakin coolest rider Ever.. TY for the memories Champ 🤙👊✌️

Kawiboy
Автор

Rick Johnson was the 80s just like Duran Duran were the 80s, a magical time growing up in that era.

kevinharker
Автор

I remember watching Rick and Ward battle it out at Red Bud.
They would hit stuff differently .
This made for great racing!

timothylawson
Автор

Totally agree with what Rick said in the end. You couldn't psyche out riders from his generation. When the 90's rolled around, things were different. With the exception of Emig, Larocco and Kiedrowski, the riders from that era were afraid of McGrath. Same thing with the RC era. I remember Hannah was dominating the '83 supercross season but then Barnett stole a double-header from him. Mike Bell who was in his last year won Dallas. Broc was Bob's target the whole year but he just got better as the year unfolded. Broc won the Pittsburg and L.A. rounds. Jeff Ward had yet to win a supercross in '83 but he was always right there.

carmelotansengco
Автор

This my era to race. Ricky was my vicarious mentor. I was born in the wrong state, a state with no chance of being seen.

chrismoody
Автор

I remember RJ a the last Carlsbad race we watched from the middle of the downhill freeway he was going 70 mph down that hard pan

MrColdwatercanyon
Автор

IMO, the biggest Hero of RJ was when he and Brock were on the production based YZ's. That production rule stemmed from the FIM to halt bike development in the USA only, (to disadvantage our dominant riders since 1981.), and RJ, on a "disadvantaged bike", still smoked the FIM through 1988 (further if he did not get hurt). Every USA racer who still won the MXofN for the next 8 years straight (after the 1986 USA only production rule), is a bigger hero than we or they realize. Eventually, the FIM had to directly take over our racing, in order to beat us.

EarthSurferUSA
Автор

Absolutely! ‘80s were the best. RJ was the baddest when he rode Yammies…🤙🏻🇺🇸

sdb
Автор

Damn right you could beat them today! That’s the problem I feel with these riders is they are the 8-10 sec deficit when they get to second place and they just stay there. You, RC, Stewart, Tomac, Degan, would see it as a challenge and run them down! Never give up attitude.

TjMills
Автор

On his day, fastest man in the world. In his prime, not easy for even the latest hero to tackle. 👍👍👍👍

nicolasayer
Автор

Interesting that Yamaha in Europe would run Ohlins USD forks for Hakan, Leif and Jacky but Yamaha in the US were more restricted in that area.

cmp
Автор

Johnson would be my pick to fulltime announce supercross and pro motocross. What we have currently is mostly hyperbole and distracting. The current crop of announcers need to calm tf down.

James Stewart and Jason Thomas do all right...just all right.

Oh, and cancel Carmichael and Christien.

DS-oiwl