Jeff Smith | |
---|---|
Jeff Smith in 1962
|
|
Nationality | English |
Born | 1934 (age 82–83) Colne, Lancashire, England |
career | |
Years active | 1953–1971 |
Teams | BSA |
500cc – 1964 – 1965 | |
Wins | 30 |
Jeffrey Vincent Smith MBE (born 1934) is an English former professional motorcycle racer.
His achievements in motorcycle racing include two 500cc (1964, 1965), two British Trials Championships, multiple British Experts Trial wins, four individual race wins in the , one Scottish Six Days Trial win and eight ISDT Gold Medals. He was a member of the BSA factory racing team. In 1970, Smith was awarded the title of Member of the Order of the British Empire.
Born in Colne, Lancashire, England, Smith began in competitions as a trials rider, becoming so successful that he was offered a place on the Norton factory team. After moving to BSA, he won the 1953 and 1954 British Trials Championship. BSA asked Smith to compete in motocross racing which he did with such success that he soon began to concentrate on a motocross career.
In 1964 at the age of 30 he captured the 500cc Motocross World Championship, defeating the defending champion, Swede Rolf Tibblin, and was voted the Motorcycle News 'Man of the Year' award. He successfully defended his crown the following year. His 1965 championship win on the four-stroke engined BSA Victor would be the last victory for this type of motor, as two-stroke engine technology dominated off-road racing for the next several decades. He finally announced his retirement in January 1972.
After he retired from competition, Smith helped to develop off-road motorcycles as special projects manager based in Minnesota, US, for Can-Am, the motorcycle division of Canada's Bombardier organisation. The Can-Am racing team went on to claim the first three places in the 1974 . Smith was also involved in vintage motorcycle racing becoming the executive director of the American Historic Racing Motorcycle Association AHRMA before retiring from that position.