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chad502ex
04-29-2005, 07:10 AM
Mud Madness


By Darragh Johnson


DANVILLE, Va. Here in Southside Virginia, the redbud is blooming and the trees glow a delicate green. But on a sunny Saturday afternoon, over a distant duet between songbirds and a fuzzy radio playing country music, the clearest sign of spring comes when the ground begins to rumble and the mud starts to fly.


Over the red-dirt hills, the all-terrain vehicles swarm in a flash of color and a thunder of motors. Airborne, their fenders look like cobra heads, stretched wide and poised to strike.


In the middle of the pack, No. 17 is gaining speed. He shoots across the Snake Pit. He sails over Big Gulp's double jump. At the Tabletop, he launches skyward.


For five years, Wes Smith, a 21-year-old lawn guy from Fauquier County, has dreamed of making it big in the growing world of four-wheeled motocross racing.


They say that to "get a good finish, you have to get a good start." And today's start was lousy -- 15th out of 20. But he's chewing up the difference now, in 10th place as he fixates on the final hill.


Careening down and curling into a hairpin turn, Smith cuts the curve sharply and goes for the inside line, trying to overtake the racer ahead of him.


Cheering him on is his traveling fan club, who line the chain-link fence and watch from the bleachers: his father waving a dry-erase board that reads "FASTER!," his three North Carolina aunts bearing a picnic feast, a cousin, a handful of hooting college buddies, and Andrea Schaeffer, a family friend who also happens to be a medic.


Suddenly Smith's white Yamaha quad bumps the one he's trying to overtake. In a flash, Smith is motionless on the ground.


The ATV rolls. It's unclear whether the 350-pound machine has landed on top of him. Two riders pass, and somehow, Smith is standing. He's back on the ATV. He's gunning through the finish line and nails 12th place.


Ron Smith sprints to his son's side just in time to catch him as he climbs off the quad and collapses. Schaeffer is close behind. She elbows aside the track paramedics and demands smelling salts and a penlight.


She kneels at Smith's side:


"Wes! Do you know where are you are?


"Do you remember the accident?"


He doesn't answer.


Danville's Birch Creek Motorsports track is much closer to Winston-Salem, N.C., than it is to Washington, and here, all-terrain-vehicle motocross racing is a devotion. These bulked-up four-wheeled carts give farmers and hunters access to even the swampiest, rockiest, muddiest, most brambly and least-accessible areas (they aren't called all-terrain vehicles for nothing). And while trying to race a four-wheeled ATV is akin to racing a mule -- they are both heavy, utilitarian and ungainly -- that's also the lure. There's nothing like getting one of these boulder-size beasts to fly.


Central to the ATV experience is the mud. Though sun shines on this weekend, requiring a relentless spray from large water trucks to keep the dust down, on sloppy wet weekends these monster wheels churn up gory splotches of mud. Not long ago, on Smith's practice track in Culpeper, he went out on a rainy afternoon. By the time Smith finished his first lap, he looked as though he'd stood in front of a demented fire hose spraying muck.


Mud laminated his helmet, dripped onto his shoulders and congealed in thick, about-to-drop gobs from his formerly white boots. The ATV was a mud-frosted confection. Even his dad, who had been standing at the edge of the track, had globs of mud polka-dotting his Carhart canvas jacket and pocking his face and ball cap.


At one point, Smith pulled off goggles turned so muddy he could barely see. "D'joo bring another pair of goggles?" his dad asked.


"I don't think I did," Wes answered, spitting mud.


"How's that taste?" Ron Smith laughed.


"Good!"


At 8:10 this Saturday morning, Smith drives his ATV into the pre-staging area and is engulfed by dozens -- and soon a few hundred -- other spacesuited riders waiting for a final practice run.


It's a confusing setup, not least because it involves so many people. About 620 ATVs are here this weekend, divided into different classes that include:


· Six- to 11-year-olds on mini quads known as "bumblebees";


· The Senior 40-plus and Vet 30-plus guys, who may be graying or bald but remain fearless;


· Women whose long curling hair escapes their helmets, announcing that another gender has climbed aboard and mastered these menacing machines;


· The slew of guys in their late teens and early twenties who, when they're not donning fire-retardant racing suits, wear clothes emblazoned with company names that announce their jobs -- excavation, landscaping, contracting. Many also wear faded jeans, baseball caps advertising racing gear and goatees (a fashionable racing hazard, Wes notes, because "if it's muddy, you have to comb it out").


Into this throng, Smith has disappeared, and there's no one to ask where he went. The viewing stands are empty, except for a helpful racer from Delaware, Mike Estep, whose nylon jacket says "Estep Electric." Where in the heck, he is asked, are the riders in Smith's "265 B" class?


Estep's mouth goes slack. "You've never seen," he says slowly, "motocross?" He explains the lineup, but he can't shake the marvel of meeting a novice at a race like this one, just outside the last capital of the Confederacy.


"I'm . . . ," he finally says, "amazed someone's never been here."


He has a point.


Just a few years ago, a big race was 150 to 200 ATV competitors, says Doug Morris, director of the All Terrain Vehicle Association. Today, "if we don't get 550 to 600, we're disappointed." Spectators typically number in the thousands.


Celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, the ATV Grand National Championship has become a 12-race circuit that starts in February in California and continues every two to four weeks until the end of summer. Racers zigzag from Texas to Florida to Georgia, stopping in Virginia, then crossing the Potomac into Leonardtown. In May they head up to Michigan, circle back through Pennsylvania, Kentucky and New York and finish up in August at Loretta Lynn's ranch in Tennessee. They tend to appear in towns whose entire population could comfortably fit inside an NFL stadium.


The Consumer Federation of America hates ATVs and the dangers they present. They cheered when the Consumer Product Safety Commission filed a federal lawsuit against ATV manufacturers and succeeded, in the late 1980s, in getting a ban on new production of three-wheelers. The CFA has been trying for more strictures, although it has not yet succeeded in its attempts to get the CPSC to keep kids from riding adult-size four-wheelers.


Smith, meanwhile, ended last year's circuit in first place in the "265 C" class (it's complicated; don't ask) and got bumped up to "265 B." He is now six classes below Pro, and he must prove himself again -- and again and again -- until he reaches his goal:


Becoming a world-class champ of quad motocross.


Becoming a pro.


Pros. They're the ones who get paid to race, as opposed to the ones -- pretty much everyone at the track -- who must pay to race.

chad502ex
04-29-2005, 07:11 AM
It's a lot to pay: Smith's new quad cost about $20,000 with custom mods. Tires are $60 each, and he'll need 20 to 24 for the season. As Smith's friend Scott Schaeffer says, "It's very expensive. Very very expensive . . . and every time we [race], we break something" -- something like a spare swing arm, which is $700. Or a set of shocks, which run $1,900 to $2,500. Ball joints are a scant $40 apiece, but there are eight of them. Even the gas to and from last month's race in Georgia cost about $300, and that doesn't count the $3 a gallon premium for the ATV. The entry fee for the racers is $100 -- every weekend.


The pros shell out none of that. They are also given a crew to haul, clean and work on the ATV. They get to stay on the white-graveled, roped-off area at the track, are put up in gleaming, rock-star trailers wired for electricity (no generators required), with hot groupies hanging around.


The pros turn heads at the track and appear in huge glossy pictures in the magazines sold as souvenirs. For them, the track is specially groomed before their races. They're so often asked for autographs that officials now schedule an adulation hour.


Pro. That's the dream.


The first race of the day begins mid-morning, and Wes Smith and two close friends from Fauquier County line up by the starting gates to watch.


Spitting tobacco and huddled in a black hooded sweatshirt, Brent Schaeffer, a 23-year-old former Marine sniper who served in both Afghanistan and Iraq and now does heating and air conditioning work in Warrenton, will compete in his first national-level race this afternoon. This man with "powerful warrior" tattooed in Asian characters on his arm is feeling sort of nervous. At one point he focuses on a flagging rider who "can't keep up," and he sounds almost empathetic. "Hopefully," he says earnestly, "that's not me."


Scott Schaeffer, a 19-year-old former quarterback at Bealeton's Liberty High School who just became manager of the Battlefield Ford used-car lot in Manassas, is focused on the first guy around the curve: "He got the hole shot," he says admiringly.


Smith jams his hands into the pockets of his padded camouflage hunting jacket. While earning an associate's degree in landscaping and turf management at Virginia Tech, he is also -- with help from his dad -- continuing to run his 20-client lawn care business back home in Nokesville, a weekend commute from Blacksburg of more than 220 miles and four hours each way. To make the races, he has had to persuade his professors to let him miss four Fridays of classes.


The guys keep their eyes glued to the dust and the racers swarming like insects over hills, when suddenly one of the quads flips forward in midair, then plummets. The crowd strains forward as the rider's body seems to impale the ground. The ATV lands on top of him.


"Oh, goodness," Smith finally exhales, with his typically gentle southern speech. "Gracious."


"That," Scott Schaeffer says, "was sick."


"That is not something you like to see." Smith is shaking his head. "He got pancaked."


"He's going out on a backboard," Schaeffer says.


For the rest of the morning, they talk like this, as though talking will keep the bad luck at bay.


Yet already Schaeffer is riding with raw scars. Three months ago he overshot a mesa-like tabletop jump by 20 feet (think Wile E. Coyote running over the cliff and finding nothing below him) and landed on flat ground, hurting both wrists. He has a two-inch scar on the right one, a one-incher on the left.


"It still hurts," he concedes. "But it's not gonna stop me."


Not long after this discussion, Chad Lohr, one of Smith's friends, wanders by, headed down to check the day's schedule. Lohr won the Pro-Am circuit last year. "What's up, buddy?" He shakes Smith's hand.


"Did you see that guy?" Smith answers, still fixated on the day's first victim.


"Nose-dived," nods Lohr, a 33-year-old from Madison, north of Charlottesville. He's been racing since he was 8. "That's what happened to me as a kid. Fractured my pelvis."


Smith and his father jog their eyebrows up their foreheads, while Lohr compares the crash to the time he dislocated two vertebrae diving through a truck tire in the swimming pool, "showing off for my mom's Sunday school class." He turns and continues down to the announcer's tower, telling Smith, "Be safe, bro."


"Wes. Wes. Do you know where you are? Do you remember the accident?" Andrea Schaeffer repeats. When he finally comes to, he tells her, "You're asking too many questions."


"I know," she answers. "I have to right now."


His head aches. He can't walk on his own. But he seems to have no broken bones. The track paramedics put him on the back of a yellow ATV, and with two guys holding him upright, his chin slumps onto his chest. They chauffeur him up the hill to his trailer.


There, his eyes slit barely open, he holds up his forehead with his left palm. His cousin, Keith Kirkley, holds iced compresses against the back of his neck. The rare times he looks up, his deep blue eyes are two beats behind the rest of him.


Brent and Scott Schaeffer finish their race and come straight to the red tent in front of Smith's trailer, mud-flecked and sweating. Scott got seventh place. Brent -- "dead last," he says grimly.


Their mother, the medic, looks at Smith, who has slouched further and whose head keeps nodding down toward his stomach. "You are not going to sleep. Do you hear me?" She kneels. "I want to get your gear off. What have you got on under these?" She pats his uniform pants. "Your drawers? You got your drawers on?"


He mumbles something, slowly nodding an assent.


"Don't worry," she tells him as she starts undressing him in front of the crowd assembled. "I do this all the time -- whooooo! Your legs need waxing, buddy! Hoooo, whoo." Smith seems to hear none of it. "Open your eyes," she repeats and slaps his knee. "You're not going to sleep for a while."


By 7 p.m., the sun is casting long evening shadows, and everyone has said goodbye to Smith, except the aunts and his father. They had planned a celebratory picnic for this part of the day -- Ron Smith brought a spiral-sliced ham, Wes's aunt Cathy Kirkley brought North Carolina barbecue, and his aunt Phyllis Hendrick cooked cole slaw, poundcake and her special peanut-butter-Rice-Krispie-marshmallow-brownie concoction. Aunt Shirley Lassiter made a green-bean salad and Smith's favorite eight-layer chocolate cake. There were sliced tomatoes and molasses cookies and frosted cookies. It's a feast.


They eat hardly any of it. Scooping small portions onto their plates, Ron and his sisters sit in a circle around Wes, say grace and eat. Just before dark, Wes announces, still slumped in his chair, "We'll be racing tomorrow. It won't be the best. But I'll get out and get some points."


Instead, at 10:30 the next morning, he is in the Danville emergency room, where the doctor tells him and his dad, "We saw a lot of y'all yesterday."


Wes woke up still dizzy, and his neck hurt. This worries the doctors, who take him back for a CT scan and a neck X-ray. The aunts wait in the hospital lobby. Children squeak their shoes on the floors, and the TV is showing "The Bells of St. Mary's." No one says much.


At one point Ron calls his wife, who missed the race because a cousin was just found murdered in Stafford County, and police were investigating. He returns to the waiting room and tells his sisters that she's upset: "Why didn't you take him to the hospital yesterday?" he says, recounting her reaction. "He passed out! You didn't tell me that. Wes didn't tell me that yesterday."


He sighs. "Lot of trauma and drama."


"And being four hours from her baby -- that's adding to it," says Cathy Kirkley.


Ron returns to check on his son, and this time, he's gone for a while. The minutes go slowly. When he finally returns, about two hours after the doctors first took Wes away, all three sisters lean forward, in unison.


"All the tests were negative," he says. "CAT scan's normal. X-ray's fine. He's fine."


It seems to be a mild concussion. Soon the dizziness will subside. Wes's neck will no longer ache. And this weekend, at Budd's Creek Motocross Park in St. Mary's County, Md., No. 17 will again rush down the hills, shoot the double jumps, and at the Tabletop, he'll launch skyward.

ny300exrider
04-29-2005, 07:25 AM
awsome story, i liked it

chad502ex
04-29-2005, 08:55 AM
Originally posted by ny300exrider
awsome story, i liked it

yea, not bad

OldYellow
04-29-2005, 09:08 AM
Good story