One of the greatest motorcycle racers the world has ever seen tells his story for the first time.
Freddie Spencer will go down in history as one of the greatest
American motorcycle road racers of all time. In addition to winning
three World Championships, he is the only rider ever to win both
the 250cc and 500cc/MotoGP Grand Prix World Championships in the
same season (1985); the only rider to win three major races during
Bike Week at Daytona International Speedway; and the youngest rider
to win the 500cc/MotoGP GrandPrix World Championship, until Marc
Marquez broke his record 30 years later.
Spencer was born 20 December 1961 in Shreveport, Louisiana, and
soon became a racing prodigy, learning to ride at the age of four
and entering his first races at five. By the time he was eleven,
Spencer had already won numerous state and regional dirt track
racing championships in Texas and Louisiana. As a teen, Spencer
began concentrating on road racing and continued winning by earning
national amateur and professional road racing championships.
Spencer retired from full-time GP racing in 1988, but made a couple
of comebacks in the next few years. He went on to win three more US
Superbike nationals, including his memorable final AMA national
victory on a rain-soaked Laguna Seca Raceway in 1995, and
officially retired later that year.
After his racing career was over, Spencer founded a successful
motorcycle riding school and businesses in Las Vegas in 1997. He
also served as an expert analyst for the SpeedChannel TV network
for 12 years to cover motorcycle races until 2008.
Then both his professional and personal lives changed dramatically
as he began the personal journey of philosophical self-exploration,
travelling the world and sharing his experiences with others. Now
he can share the story he was always supposed to tell.
It's bloody brilliant ... one of the most interesting
autobiographies we've read
*Motorcycle News*
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