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The Beattie files: Mountain Mayhem

Trial by fire and the legend of Ajay


(Ed's note: These are excerpts from young Beattie's book on some of the more colourful incidents in an action-packed life. See the end of the piece for more info.)

(by Chris Beattie, Feb 2024)

The flaming toilet roll smacked into the fence and bounced to a stop between us. The police sergeant and I had just been discussing the likely outcome of the evening’s festivities.

 

“So, given the history of riots up here on the mountain, how do you reckon tonight is looking?” I had said, attempting to convey the veneer of an earnest, hard-headed journalist that I definitely wasn’t feeling.

 

“Well, I’m hoping for a pretty quiet night,” he lied, eyeing me with suspicion.

 

As the fiery roll smouldered at our feet, there was a brief pause in the conversation as we each considered our options. My overriding instinct was to run. His was to retreat into ‘Fort Bathurst’.

 

“Actually, you’d better get the fuck out of here!” he said, before ducking back behind the walls of the police enclosure at the top of Mount Panorama in the NSW town of Bathurst.

 

Meanwhile, I was left literally in the spotlight. Powerful search lights illuminated the night and the no man’s land of dust and empty beer cans as the angry and restless mob of bikers bristled with menace. Hundreds had encircled the compound as darkness descended on the Saturday night of the annual Easter motorcycle races.


bath

Above: vintage early eighties mountain craziness...or at least the aftermath.

 

For several years, the Bathurst race meeting had been embroiled in controversy as up to 25,000 motorcyclists made their way to the iconic circuit to watch their heroes do battle on the track. The problem was, a battle of an entirely different nature had become almost a ritual in the campground on top of the mountain on the Saturday night.

 

Fuelled by large quantities of beer, liquor and whatever else they could smuggle through the security checkpoint at the entrance to the track, restless groups of bikers would mill around campfires waiting for the main game to kick off. It could start with someone dragging a mate behind a bike on an upturned car bonnet, and there would be impromptu races through the dusty tracks that wound their way through the campground. The excitement level would ramp up as the almost compulsory car burning would get the crowd fired up – literally.

 

After repeated riots and hundreds of arrests in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, NSW police convinced the state government to fund the construction of a fortified compound on the top of the mountain with the aim of enforcing peace and order. Having a large police presence didn’t do much to restore peace, though. If anything, it had the opposite effect. Racegoers turned into rioters as boredom set in after a day of high-speed and sometimes fatal action on the racetrack. The compound was like a giant, barbed wire target, attracting beer cans, rocks and other missiles as the night inevitably unravelled.

 

This particular year I had drawn the short straw as the rookie reporter for Australian Motor Cycle News. Only in the job a couple of months, I had ridden up with the rest of the editorial crew from Melbourne. Apart from covering some of the minor races, I had been assigned to cover activities on the mountain on the Saturday night.

 

“You’re going to love it up there,” grinned the Editor at the time, Bob Maron.

 

“Yeah, you’ll make a bunch of new friends and come back with some great stories, I’m sure,” smiled publisher Mike Hanlon, with an encouraging pat on the back.

 

Having attended the race as a spectator in prior years, I at least had a fair idea what to expect. Two years before I’d only just avoided a pummelling when a group of riot police from the NSW Tactical Response Group rampaged through the campground late at night, wielding batons and indiscriminatingly belting anyone they could find. I ducked into a tent at the last minute, listening as victims fell screaming and cursing, only to be dragged back to a bus and handcuffed for transport down to the cells in Bathurst.

 

By 1983, it seemed the stage had been set for a truly epic riot. Word around the traps was that campers were coming armed to the teeth and the police had boosted the number of TRG volunteers to over 100 for the Easter races.

 

As I stood alone in front of the compound, missiles began to rain down overhead. A beer can sailed past my head and rocks began to impact the fence behind me. It was definitely time to flee the scene, I decided, sprinting towards a nearby clump of trees to better view – and report on – the action.

 

“Fuck the cops! Fuck the cops!” went the chant, which grew louder as the crowd edged closer to the compound.

 

From behind the mob a large, rolling ball of flame emerged, which later turned out to be a Volkswagen that had been seized and set alight. It was pushed towards the fence as rioters attempted to breach the compound,but was eventually overturned and left to burn as proceedings approached fever pitch.

 

“Fuck, they’re coming!” yelled someone as the gates of the compound burst open, black-uniformed and helmeted TRG members fanning out behind large riot shields.

 

Most of the crowd immediately turned and ran, while a handful of more hardy and determined souls defiantly stood their ground, brandishing tree branches, metal bars and other impromptu weapons. All to no avail, though. As I watched on, a wave of TRG officers swept through them like a black tsunami, bodies falling to batons amidst the dust, confusion and mayhem.

 

Those bikers left lying on the ground or trying to limp away into the night were grabbed by the police and dragged struggling and swearing back into the compound. The cycle would be repeated several times throughout the night as the number of rioters gradually dwindled due to attrition and waning enthusiasm.

 

Largely unscathed, save for a fine layer of Mt Panorama dust, I retreated back to our motel in the centre of town, to find the rest of the magazine team fast asleep. Still buzzing from the scenes on the mountain, it took a while for me to doze off.

 

In the morning I attended the official police press conference at the Bathurst police complex. As I was to hear, I’d obviously departed the scene before festivities had reached their climax.

 

The conflict had escalated later in the evening to the point where police had been targeted with high explosives, according to a police spokesman. At least two sticks of gelignite had been flung at the police compound, one damaging the front gate and the other injuring an officer, who suffered serious injuries to his foot.

 

“He’s very lucky to be alive,” said the sergeant, coincidentally the same one I had encountered the previous night. “If it had exploded before he kicked it away it would have blown his legs off. As it was, the blast knocked down two other men standing near him.”

 

Other weapons used on the night included bricks and rocks, Molotov cocktails and nuts and bolts apparently catapulted from slingshots.

 

In all, police arrested 77 people on a total of 134 charges, including resisting arrest and assault causing actual bodily harm. Another was arrested after riding his bike into a group of police standing near the compound.

 

“The men in hospital said it was the worst year they’d seen,” continued the spokesman. “They said it was terrible … it just didn’t stop.

 

“The bikies are a strange breed,” he said. “You just can’t reason with them. The police made repeated requests to them to stop, but they just didn’t listen.”

 

I have to mention one other highlight of Bathurst 1983, which is forever etched in my mind. At one point during official practice on the Friday, mate and legendary motorsport photographer, Lou Martin suggested I join him at a camera spot near the bottom of Conrod Straight. This was well prior to the legendary straight being tamed by the inclusion of the Chase, which had the effect of slowing bikes and cars as they rampaged down the mountain.

 

“Mate, you need to come up here and watch Ajay as he comes over the last hump before Murrays,” urged Lou when we caught up in the pits during the lunch break. “The Arai 500 practice is straight after lunch. You won’t believe Ajay until you see it for yourself.”


andrew
              johnson

 

Above: Ajay at Bathurst in 1983, depicted by Classic Two Wheels – see the gripping flashback report, here.

Andrew ‘Ajay’ Johnson was considered the ironman of Australian road racing in the early ‘80s and had a reputation for his take-no-prisoners aggressive riding style. Get between Ajay and a corner and you better know your stuff because there were few other racers who had the ‘right stuff’ to out-brake or bluff him into a corner. Ajay had cut his nuts on Australian Superbike racing, in particular with the legendary Syndicate Kawasaki, and had fingers and knuckles missing from one hand as a result of a tangle with some earthmoving equipment early in his career.

 

For Bathurst 1983, Ajay was the lead rider for the Honda Australia team (his team-mate being the equally legendary Mal ‘Wally’ Campbell). Because of the prestige of Bathurst, and in particular the Arai 500 Endurance Race, Ajay was honoured by having Honda make available a special Grand Prix RS500 triple-cylinder two-stroke bike for the event. Later that same year, American Freddie Spencer would take out the world title on almost identical machine.

 

The fact that the world GP motorcycle powerhouse of Honda would deem Ajay worthy of a ride on an RS500 was a special honour -- and also a major drawcard for Bathurst that year. And with a couple of factory people on hand to keep an eye on their exotic and extremely expensive thoroughbred racer, Ajay was determined to show them he had what it took to wring the best out of it. By the end of the weekend he would reward the Big H with a new Bathurst lap record.

 

Meanwhile, taking up position next to Lou for the Arai practice, I waited as the field made its way around on the first lap. But I didn’t have to wait long.

 

“Here he comes, get ready,” said Lou as we crouched behind the barrier a mere couple of metres from the track.

 

It all happened so fast on the first lap I barely had time to comprehend what I was seeing. Having come off the mountain Ajay had almost two kilometres of downhill straight to wind up the throttle on the 200-plus hp GP weapon. By the time he reached us, with his engine howling like a banshee, radar guns were reading close to 320km/h, or 200mph in the old money. The effect as he emerged over the hump with about 300 metres of braking distance before the end of the straight was that he and the RS were airborne, both tyres well clear of the track.

 

It wasn’t until the second lap that I realized that Ajay was literally flying on the fastest part of one of the world’s most dangerous racetracks. Mere metres away, I watched lap after lap as Ajay’s rear tyre kicked up a puff of smoke as it came back to earth at more than 320km/h. It takes a very special breed of human to be able to do that consistently, without pulling in for a toilet break.

 

Ajay had his faults, for sure. There is a legion of stories about his occasionally outrageous post-race antics. He was the absolute epitome of the Aussie larrikin, a ratbag at times who was definitely cut from a different cloth and would struggle to put up with the corporate bullshit that nowadays infects and sterilises much of motorcycle racing. But there are few if any racers from that era that I believe could have matched him on equal machinery. When the visor dropped, he was 100 per cent pure racer, and if you shared the track with him you did it on his terms. Unfortunately, he is no longer with us, but I count myself lucky that I could call him a mate and always count on a laugh or two whenever we caught up. Vale Australia’s motorcycle hardman.

 

Similarly, Bathurst didn’t survive into the modern era. On-track fatalities and the threat of escalating riots eventually doomed the Easter road races, much to the disappointment of racers, ardent fans and no doubt the rioters and TRG police, who I suspect looked forward to their annual contest.

beattie book

The excerpt is from Beattie's wild and woolly book. So far as we know it's had one brief print run and he's threatening to do another. Watch this space.

In the meantime he can be contacted by email.


More at The Beattie Files home page



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