Jock Taylor

British sidecar racer

John Robert Taylor
Taylor aboard his Fowler Yamaha outfit in 1979 at a guest-appearance when opening a motorcycle shop at Derby, prior to Stars at Darley, a nearby race meeting held annually where a selection of higher-level motorcycle racers compete in a local club event
NationalityBritish
Born(1954-03-09)9 March 1954
Pencaitland, East Lothian, Scotland
Died15 August 1982(1982-08-15) (aged 28)
Imatra Circuit, Finland
Motorcycle racing career statistics
Grand Prix motorcycle racing
Active years1978–1982
Team(s)1 Fowlers of Bristol
Championships1 (1980)

Jock Taylor (9 March 1954 – 15 August 1982) was a Scottish World Champion motorcycle sidecar racer.

John Robert (Jock) Taylor was born in Pencaitland, East Lothian, and entered his first sidecar race at the age of 19, as the passenger to Kenny Andrews (1974). The following year he took part in his first race as a driver. Taylor died in Finland as a consequence of a racing incident in 1982.[1][2][3]

Racing career

Taylor was the Scottish Sidecar Champion with passenger Lewis Ward in 1977. He won races at East Fortune near Haddington, Beveridge Park in Kirkcaldy and at Knockhill near Dunfermline as well events in England with some success. In 1978 he decided to tackle the odd Grand Prix race and the British Championships and parted company with Ward and teamed up with a new passenger from nearby Haddington called Jimmy Neil. It took some time for the new partnership to gel but by the end of the season they were regularly winning races in England. In 1979 Taylor acquired a Seymaz hub steering type outfit and found it not to his liking after two accidents that left Jimmy Neil with a fractured wrist and caused the death of stand-in passenger Dave Powell at Oulton Park in a high-speed crash. With Neil still injured, Taylor used veteran passenger Jimmy Law for the German GP at Hockenheim on his old Windle framed Yamaha where they finished fifth. Although Neil returned at Assen in Holland, it was when he teamed up with former Swedish 125 cc rider Benga Johansson that Taylor took his first Grand Prix victory at the Swedish TT at Karlskoga shortly after. There were further successes towards the end of 1979 in Britain where he finished runner-up in the British Championship behind Dick Greasley. In 1980, Taylor and Benga Johansson won 4 Grand Prix races, and finished on the podium in all seven events they finished. He won the British Championship and won the Isle of Man Sidecar B race to win the Sidecar TT overall. In 1981 he retained his British title and he went on to become a four-time TT race winner. In 1982 Taylor and Johansson raised the sidecar lap record at the Isle of Man TT to 108.29 mph (ca. 175 km/h), a lap record which stood for 7 years.

Death

In the 1982 Finnish Grand Prix, held in Imatra under very wet conditions, Taylor and Johansson's bike began to aquaplane and slid off the road, colliding with a telephone pole. Emergency services attempted to remove him from the wreckage until a second sidecar team slid off into them, killing Taylor. He was buried in the local cemetery at Pencaitland, and a memorial to him was erected in the village in December 2006. A memorial also stands in Beveridge Park, Kirkcaldy, overlooking Railway Bend on the old motorcycle racing circuit. Jock Taylor has also a memorial in Imatra, near the paddock of Finnish championship racetrack.

Restoration

Jock's World championship, and TT 108.29 mph lap record-winning sidecar was bought by friend and fellow competitor Jack Muldoon from Jock's sponsor Dennis Trollope. Jack rescued Jock's outfit from the 5-man consortium who were supposed to restore the bike to its original condition and display it in a museum in Alford, Aberdeenshire. That never happened in the four years that it lay up in Alford in bits in a shed.

Jack Muldoon and family bought Jock's bike in March 2012 and started the restoration work immediately. The sidecar was completely stripped to a bare chassis, with months spent with emery cleaning and polishing the chassis. Due to the 26 years it lay at Donington in the museum and then 4 years up in Aberdeen, the chassis and all components were covered in rust and everything was seized: every component on the bike had to be stripped and cleaned, all bearings in all parts of the chassis were replaced, and the engine was completely rebuilt. It was done with the help of Bill Howarth and Dennis Trollope for all the Yamaha TZ700 parts required in the engine rebuild; Terry Windle, Stuart Mellor, Lockheed, HEL Performance Brake Pipes, Paul Drake Koni Shockers, Yolst Silkoline Oils. By August the restoration was 90% complete – it was the first time in 30 years that the TZ700 engine had run, and it was paraded at the Jock Taylor Memorial race weekend at East Fortune near Edinburgh in August 2012, a few miles from where Jock was born and brought up.

Annual Jock Taylor Memorial Race

In the year following his death an annual end of season race was established at Knockhill called the Jock Taylor Trophy and it has always attracted the very best crews. Every year sidecar racers travel from all over the UK to race in what has become a prestigious race. In 2012, the race was held at East Fortune where Taylor started his racing career nearly 40 years ago.

References

  1. ^ Liverpool Echo page 14 Monday 16 August 1982
  2. ^ "Sidecar hero Jock Taylor". International Motorcycling Federation. 2 May 2016. Archived from the original on 19 January 2021. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  3. ^ "The death of Jock Taylor at the Finnish Grand Prix has robbed motorcycle sport of one of its most outstanding figures". Motorcycle Sport, October 1982, p.2. Accessed 15 September 2022

External links

  • Taylor's Rider Profile on the official Isle of Man TT website
  • BBC News article on unveiling of memorial, December 2006
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Rolf Biland (B2A)
With: Kurt Waltisperg
World Sidecar Champion
1980
With: Benga Johansson
Succeeded by
Rolf Biland
With: Kurt Waltisperg
Preceded by
Bruno Holzer (B2B)
With: Karl Meierhans
  • v
  • t
  • e
   

1949   Oliver - Jenkinson
1950   Oliver - Dobelli
1951   Oliver - Dobelli
1952   Smith - Clements / Nutt
1953   Oliver - Dibben
1954   Noll - Cron
1955   Faust - Remmert
1956   Noll - Cron
1957   Hillebrand - Grunwal
1958   Schneider - Strauß
1959   Schneider - Strauß
1960   Fath - Wohlgemuth
1961   Deubel - Hörner
1962   Deubel - Hörner
1963   Deubel - Hörner
1964   Deubel - Hörner
1965   Scheidegger - Robinson

1966   Scheidegger - Robinson
1967   Enders - Engelhardt
1968   Fath - Kalauch
1969   Enders - Engelhardt
1970   Enders - Kalauch / Engelhardt
1971   Owesle - Kremer / Rutterford
1972   Enders - Engelhardt
1973   Enders - Engelhardt
1974   Enders - Engelhardt
1975   Steinhausen - Huber
1976   Steinhausen - Huber
1977   O'Dell - Arthur / Holland
1978   Biland - Williams
1979A   Biland - Waltisperg
1979B   Holzer - Meierhans

1980   Taylor - Johansson
1981   Biland - Waltisberg
1982   Schwärzel - Huber
1983   Biland - Waltisberg
1984   Streuer - Schnieders
1985   Streuer - Schnieders
1986   Streuer - Schnieders
1987   Webster - Hewitt
1988   Webster - Hewitt / Simmons
1989   Webster - Hewitt
1990   Michel - Birchall
1991   Webster - Simmons
1992   Biland - Waltisberg
1993   Biland - Waltisberg
1994   Biland - Waltisberg

1995   Dixon - Hetherington
1996   Dixon - Hetherington
1997   Webster - James
1998   Webster - James
1999   Webster - James
2000   Webster - Woodhead
2001   Klaffenböck - Parzer
2002   Abbott - Biggs
2003   Webster - Woodhead
2004   Webster - Woodhead
2005   Reeves - Reeves
2006   Reeves - Reeves
2007   Reeves - Farrance
2008   Päivärinta - Karttiala
2009   Birchall - Birchall
2010   Päivärinta - Hänni

2011   Päivärinta - Hänni
2012   Reeves - Hawes
2013   Päivärinta - Hänni
2014   Reeves - Cluze
2014 F2   Reeves - Cluze
2015   Streuer - Koerts
2015 F2   Reeves - Farrance
2016   Päivärinta - Kainulainen
2016 F2   Birchall - Birchall
2017 Birchall - Birchall
2018 Birchall - Birchall
2019 Reeves - Wilkes
2021 Schlosser - Fries
2022 Ellis - Clément
2023 Ellis - Clément

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