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Wayne Rainey

American motorcycle racer (born 1960)

Wayne Rainey

Summary

American motorcycle racer (born 1960)

FieldValue
nameWayne Rainey
imageWr12.jpg
captionRainey on the Yamaha YZR500
birth_date
birth_placeDowney, California, U.S.
GP Active years1984, 1988 - 1993
GP TeamsYamaha
GP Championships500cc - 1990, 1991, 1992
GP Race Starts94
GP Race Wins24
GP Podiums65
GP Total Points1270.5
GP Poles16
GP Fastest laps23
GP First win1988 500cc British Grand Prix
GP Last win1993 500cc Czech Republic Grand Prix
GP First race1984 250cc Nations Grand Prix
GP Last race1993 500cc Italian Grand Prix

Wayne Wesley Rainey (born October 23, 1960) is an American former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer. He competed in the FIM Grand Prix motorcycle racing world championships in 1984 and from 1988 to 1993. He won the 500cc World Championship three times and the Daytona 200 once. He was characterized by his smooth, calculating riding style, and for his intense rivalry with compatriot Kevin Schwantz, between 1987 and 1993.

Racing history

Rainey began his career racing in the A.M.A. Grand National Championship, a series that encompassed four distinct dirt track disciplines plus road races. In 1981, he finished the Grand National season as the 15th ranked dirt track racer in the country. Following his success in the Novice 250cc roadrace class, Kawasaki hired him to compete in the 1982 AMA Superbike Championship as a teammate to the then defending National Champion Eddie Lawson. The following year, Lawson moved to the Grand Prix circuit and Rainey took over the role of leading rider, earning the 1983 National Championship for Kawasaki.

In 1984, Rainey accepted an offer to ride for the newly formed Kenny Roberts Yamaha racing team in the 250cc class of the Grand Prix World Championship. A less than successful season (1 podium and difficulty push-starting the bike) saw him returning home in 1985 to join the Maclean Racing team in U.S. 250 and Formula 1 classes, and then on to the American Honda team from 1986 to 1987 where he raced Superbike and F1. It was during the 1987 Superbike National Championship that his intense rivalry began with Kevin Schwantz as the two battled it out for the title. Rainey won the Championship, but the fierce rivalry between the two competitors was just beginning. So intense was their rivalry that they continued their battle during the 1987 Transatlantic Trophy match races in which they were supposedly teammates competing against a team of British riders.

Wayne Rainey on a Yamaha YZR500 in 1990

In 1988 Rainey returned to Europe, again joining Team Roberts Yamaha, this time in the premier 500cc division riding the YZR500. His arch-rival Schwantz followed him to Europe, signing to race the 500cc class for Team Suzuki. The two would continue their rivalry on race tracks all across Europe, driving each other to higher levels of competitiveness. In 1988, Rainey won his first world championship race at the British Grand Prix. Also in 1988, he and his Team Roberts Yamaha teammate Kevin Magee won the prestigious Suzuka 8 Hours endurance race in Japan. In the 1989 campaign, Rainey finished second overall behind Eddie Lawson, winning three races and placing on the podium in every race that he finished. [[File:Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix 1991.jpg|250px|thumb|[[Mick Doohan]] (3) leads [[Kevin Schwantz]] (34), Rainey (1) and [[John Kocinski]] (19) at the [[1991 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix|1991 Japanese Grand Prix]]. Schwantz would go on to win the race.]]

From 1990 to 1992, Rainey hit his stride earning three consecutive 500cc crowns for Yamaha. Rainey was involved in a hard-fought campaign with Kevin Schwantz while seeking his fourth-consecutive title in 1993. He was leading the championship by a margin of 11 points over Schwantz, and leading the GP when he suffered his career-ending crash at the Italian Grand Prix in Misano. He slid into the gravel trap at high speed, breaking his spine against the raked surface designed as a safety feature for car racing. The injury handed the title to his great rival Kevin Schwantz. Rainey's injuries rendered him permanently paralyzed from the chest down.

After turning to Williams team owner and quadriplegic Frank Williams for advice, Rainey later became the team manager for Marlboro Yamaha for a few years. After the 1995 season, Schwantz retired from the Grand Prix circuit, partly due to nagging injuries and partly because losing the one great rival that had fired his competitive intensity made him view his own mortality much more clearly.

Rainey refused to give up racing despite his disability and raced a hand-controlled Superkart in the World SuperKart series based in Northern California.

Rainey lived in Monterey, California in a house that is not far from WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca. The nearby circuit named a corner in his honor, Rainey Curve, which is a medium-speed, acute left-hander that follows the famous Corkscrew. Rainey was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 1999. The FIM named him a Grand Prix "Legend" in 2000. He was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2007. In 2003, he was one of the subjects of the motorcycle racing documentary film, Faster.

After several seasons of poor decisions by Daytona Motorsports Group, the organization that operated AMA-sanctioned road racing beginning in 2009, a dispute with Dorna/Infront in 2013 regarding AMA Superbike coverage on shared FIM weekends led to a lack of media coverage for that year's Superbike round at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, as well as the Harley-Davidson XR1200 round at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in both 2013 and 2014, the AMA transferred the commercial rights to AMA-sanctioned road racing to Rainey and his business partners at the end of 2014. The MotoAmerica era of AMA-sanctioned road racing began in 2015.

Rainey lives in Monterey, California, with his wife Shae. They have one son, Rex, who graduated from Pepperdine University and works at CBS Television Distribution with the Entertainment Tonight and The Insider accounts.

Rainey rode his 1992 YZR500 at the 2022 Goodwood Festival of Speed. Yamaha specially modified the bike by moving the rear brake and gear shift controls to the handlebars.

Awards

Rainey was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2008.

Grand Prix career statistics

Source:

Points system from 1969 to 1987:

Points1512108654321

Points system from 1988 to 1992:

Points201715131110987654321

Points system from 1993 onwards:

Points252016131110987654321

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearClassTeamMachine123456789101112131415PointsRankWins1984250ccRoberts YamahaTZR2508th1988500ccLucky Strike Roberts YamahaYZR5003rd1989500ccLucky Strike Roberts YamahaYZR5002nd1990500ccMarlboro Roberts YamahaYZR5001st1991500ccMarlboro Roberts YamahaYZR5001st1992500ccMarlboro Roberts YamahaYZR5001st1993500ccMarlboro Roberts YamahaYZR5002nd
RSA
NCNAT
3ESP
10AUT
NCGER
6FRA
6YUG
4NED
12BEL
NCGBR
14SWE
13RSM
NC290
JPN
6USA
4ESP
6EXP
2NAT
3GER
2AUT
3NED
7BEL
5YUG
3FRA
5GBR
1SWE
5CZE
3BRA
Ret1891
JPN
2AUS
2USA
1ESP
2NAT
DNSGER
1AUT
3YUG
2NED
1BEL
3FRA
3GBR
3SWE
DNFCZE
3BRA
3210.53
*JPN*
1USA
1ESP
2*NAT*
1GER
2AUT
2*YUG*
1NED
2BEL
1FRA
3GBR
2SWE
1CZE
1HUN
DNFAUS
32557
JPN
3*AUS*
1*USA*
1*ESP*
3*ITA*
9GER
2AUT
2EUR
1NED
2*FRA*
1GBR
2RSM
1*CZE*
1VDM
3MAL
DNS2336
JPN
DNFAUS
2MAL
2ESP
2ITA
DNFEUR
1GER
DNFNED
DNSHUN
5FRA
1GBR
2BRA
1RSA
31403
AUS
2MAL
1JPN
1ESP
2AUT
3GER
5NED
5EUR
1RSM
3GBR
2*CZE*
1ITA
DNFUSA
-FIM
-2144

Suzuka 8 Hours results

YearTeamCo-RiderBikePos1988
USA Team Lucky Strikes RobertsAUS Kevin Magee
USA Wayne RaineyYamaha YZF7501st

References

References

  1. "Wayne Rainey profile". crash.net.
  2. "Wayne Rainey career statistics". motogp.com.
  3. "Wayne Rainey at the Motorcycle Hall of Fame". motorcyclemuseum.org.
  4. Oxley, Mat. (2010). "An Age Of Superheroes". Haynes Publishing.
  5. Wood, Bill. (August 1983). "Wayne Rainey's road to stardom".
  6. "1988 Suzuka 8 Hours results". motoracing-japan.com.
  7. Scott, Michael. (1997). ''Wayne Rainey: His own story.'' Newbury Park, CA: Haynes Publications, Inc.
  8. (July 16, 2007). "Three-Time 500cc World Champion Wayne Rainey To Be Honored This Weekend At Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca". roadracingworld.com.
  9. "MotoGP Legends". motogp.com.
  10. "Wayne Rainey at the International Motorsports Hall of Fame". motorsportshalloffame.com.
  11. "American Motorcyclist Association to sanction MotoAmerica's professional road racing series in North America". americanmotorcyclist.com.
  12. (2022-03-28). "RAINEY TO RIDE YZR500 AGAIN".
  13. [https://www.motorcyclenews.com/news/goodwood-festival-of-speed/ Sell-out crowds witness Wayne Rainey reunited with his YZR500 at Goodwood Festival of Speed] ''[[Motorcycle News]]'', 1 July 2022. Retrieved 4 July 2022
  14. [http://www.mshf.com/hall-of-fame/inductees/wayne-rainey.html Wayne Rainey] at the [[Motorsports Hall of Fame of America]]
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