Larry Roeseler is an American professional off-road racer. He is notable for having won the prestigious Baja 1000 desert race a record 13 times, the most of any competitor since the race's inception in 1967.[1] His victories made him one of the most accomplished multi-discipline desert racers in off-road racing history.[2]
Roeseler began his racing career on two wheels, racing off-road motorcycles to numerous victories before switching to four wheels. He won the Baja 1000 race ten times on motorcycles then, won the event three more times driving in the open-wheel and trophy truck classes for a record 13 Overall Baja 1000 Wins. He was also a successful motorcycle enduro competitor, winning 10 gold medals in the International Six Days Enduro.[3] Roeseler was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 1999 and, the Off-road Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2012.[1][3]
Off-road racing career
editMotorcycle racing
editRoeseler began his off-road racing career in the California desert racing a Harley-Davidson.[4] He soon moved on Husqvarna motorcycles and became one of the top AMA desert racers competing in desert races including hare scrambles and Hare and Hound races.[4] Roeseler won his first Baja 1000 in 1976 with teammate Mitch Mayes on a Husqvarna.[5] Roeseler was adept at competing in both high speed desert racing as well as relatively slow enduro races.[6] He represented the United States at the International Six Days Enduro which, is a form of off-road motorcycle Olympics and the oldest annual competition sanctioned by the FIM dating back to 1913.[7] Roeseler's riding skills took him to 10 Gold Medals in ISDE competition.[8]
He became a member of the Kawasaki factory racing team in 1987. He won the AMA National Enduro Reliability Series in 1990.[3] Roeseler retired from motorcycle racing in 1994 at the age of 37.[3]
Four-wheel racing
editIn 2007, Roeseler drove the Terrible Herbst Truggy to win the 2007 Baja 250.[9] In 2008 Roeseler joined Larry Ragland and Rhys Millen on the Norman Motorsports team as co-driver of Trophy Truck #8.[10] In September 2008, Roeseler won his second Trophy Truck race with a 10-minute lead for the Overall Win at the Primm 300 driving the first three of four laps in the #8 Norman Motorsports Ford F-150 race truck, capturing the overall and SCORE Trophy Truck victory at the 13th Annual SCORE Terrible's Primm 300 desert race.[11][12]
As of 2015 in SCORE International competition, Roeseler has 39 Class Wins, 26 Overall Wins, 11 Overall Baja 500 Wins, and a record 13 Overall Baja 1000 Wins, the most of all time.[2]
Film Credits
editRoeseler was featured in Dana Brown's 2004 Film of the Baja 1000, 'Dust to Glory'.[13]
Notes
edit- ^ a b "Larry Roeseler at the Off-Road Hall of Fame". ormhof.org. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
- ^ a b "Legends: Larry Roeseler". score-international.com. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
- ^ a b c d "Larry Roeseler at the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame". motorcyclemuseum.org. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
- ^ a b "Blast From The Past: Larry Roeseler". dirtbikemagazine.com. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
- ^ "Baja 1000 winners". motorsportsetc.com. Archived from the original on 24 March 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
- ^ Booth, Steve; Van Barriger, John (1983). "The 58th ISDE". American Motorcyclist. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
- ^ "History of the International Six Days Trial". ultimatemotorcycling.com. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
- ^ "ISDT Results". isdt.org. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
- ^ 2007 DirtNewz.com Larry Roeseler Driving the Smithbuilt-HERBST Truggy Dominates Baja AGAIN!
- ^ 2008 RogerNormanRacing.comLarry Roeseler joins Norman Motorsports
- ^ 2008 Off-Road.com Primm 300 Overall Winners: Roger Norman & Larry Roeseler
- ^ Clark, D. 2008 Dirt-Newz SCORE Norman/Roeseler Snag Overall Win at SCORE Terrible's 300 in Primm Archived 2008-09-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ 2008 NYTimes.com Larry Roeseler in 'Dust to Glory'