The Rider Files

February 8, 2010

Sully & Springer in the Astrodome

Filed under: Flat Track, Road Racing — admin @ 1:08 pm
Mike Sullivan (44W) leads defending national champ Jay Springsteen (1) and other riders in practice for the 1979 Houston TT in the Astrodome.

Mike Sullivan (44W) leads defending national champ Jay Springsteen (1) and other riders in practice for the 1979 Houston TT in the Astrodome.

Mike Sullivan (44W) leads defending national champ Jay Springsteen (1) and other riders in practice for the 1979 Houston TT in the Astrodome. Sullivan is retiring from racing after 40 years. He’s having a retirement party on February 20th, 2010, starting at 4 PM at the Hotel Washington and Vintage Motorcycle Museum in Chehalis, Wash.

Sullivan’s first ride on a motorcycle as a kid was on the handlebars with his dad’s buddy Evel Knievel.

Mike started his professional career as a flat tracker, later switched to road racing and went on to become one of the leading 250 Grand Prix road racers of the 1980s and ‘90s.

In 1996 Rich Oliver was simply dominating the AMA 250GP field like no other rider had before. He won every race and the margins of victory were ridiculous, often double digits, but Sullivan at least had the distinction of finishing closer to Oliver than any other rider that year when he crossed the line only 7.6-seconds behind Oliver on a real scrappers track at the Pomona Fariplex. Sullivan was 39 at the time.

Mike Sullivan

Mike Sullivan

“Mike was always one of those underrate guys,” said Oliver, a five-time AMA 250 Grand Prix Champion. “I always worried what might happen if Mike ever got a really good bike or picked up a great sponsor. He did all his stuff on his own pretty much and I think given the chance to race for one of the big teams he would have been right there and surprised a lot of people.”

Sullivan will continue to run his Mike Sullivan Roadracing School and Performance Track Days.

2 Comments »

  1. Even this fine article cannot do justice to Mike, his accomplishments, or to the man himself. I have known him 14 years and couldn’t summarize him. In my opinion, he is the singular professional motorcycle racing star of the Pacific Northwest, and a respected and likable pro at tracks all across the country.

    He has battled and beaten the best in the Northwest for years and years, taught them through his schools, and then raised the bar yet higher racing them year after year.

    He is known here are the “Master of Lines” and his legacy of skills has tricked down through his students and competitors to nearly every rider in northwest motorcycle road racing, and as far as the clubs using Miller, Utah.

    Mike has won many #1 plates and set numerous track records over the years. Racers copy him, and all want to be like him, but I doubt that many would be comfortable at the speeds and with the people with whom he races. I have literally seen him in a hundred handlebar-banging battles, lap after lap, with talent half his age and sometimes better equipment.

    If this weren’t enough, Mike is a total Class Act. Generous to a fault, and always the gentleman. I have never heard a disrespectful word out of his mouth, or anything but encouragement and a smile for all of his many generations of progeny, the riders.

    There are very few who deserve the word “Legend” but in motorcycle racing, Mike is one of them. The premier classes will not be the same without him. Luckily we’ll still have his school and friendship for years to come.

    Comment by John Lippis — February 10, 2010 @ 1:24 pm

  2. As I started racing, every one around the pits would comment about Mike, and how fast he is. Little did I know that when I entered into the Expert classes with him and essentially was competing with him (but had no chance in every coming close to his skill level), he was always willing to lend a helping hand. He was always curtious and gratious, on and off the track. He’d even say excuse me as he flew passed me, at least that is what I heard. To this day, after several years off the track but still present on race days, he still takes time as he prepares for a race to say “Hi Bob, good to see you, are you gonna be out there this year?” and that alone speaks to his character.

    Mike- It has been a pleasure to race with you, ride with you and learn from you. You are a legend in your own right.

    Thank you.

    Comment by Robert Good — February 10, 2010 @ 9:47 pm

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