Old School: Beckett, bikes, balls and all
By Liam Beckett and Harry Gregg
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About this ebook
Liam Beckett is old school. One of Northern Ireland’s best-loved sports pundits, few can touch him when it comes to talking about road racing and football. And he doesn’t just talk the talk, he’s walked the walk – he was Robert Dunlop’s mechanic and mentor for almost twenty years and during his ten-year football career he was both player and manager.
In this new book, Beckett talks frankly about what these sports mean to him, how they have changed and the challenges that lie ahead. Among other things, he talks passionately about his sporting heroes; relives the games he’ll never forget; gets stuck into those who co-opt sport into religion or politics; and opens up about the loss of William Dunlop and his decision to take a break from road racing.
Straight-talking, funny and generous, this is Liam Beckett – telling it like it is!
Liam Beckett
Liam Beckett was born in Ballymoney, County Antrim. He is a sports pundit on BBC Radio Ulster and writes a weekly football column for The Newsletter. He played football for Crusaders and Coleraine in the Irish League as well as for Drogheda in the League of Ireland before moving into management, first with his hometown team Ballymoney United, and also Cliftonville and Institute.After his playing career came to an end Beckett offered a young Robert Dunlop the use of a workshop at his house in Ballymoney. For the next 20 years, he worked as his mechanic/manager until Dunlop’s untimely death at the North West 200 in 2008.
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Old School - Liam Beckett
Preface
If someone had told me that one day I would write a book, I would have thought they were crazy. That’s not what someone from my background would ever have thought about doing. And yet here I am, having just finished my second book. Like most things in my life, it’s sport that’s taken me down this road. As a youngster, football was my life and I was lucky enough to make a career in the sport, first as a player and then as a manager. Road racing has also been a great passion of mine and I spent twenty of the best years of my life working closely with the late great road racing king, Robert Dunlop. My football and road racing careers opened other doors for me in later life – my newspaper column and my commentary work for the BBC have kept me very much involved in the sports that I love.
When I wrote my first book, Full Throttle, in 2016, I wanted to pay tribute to Robert and to our road racing years together. I thought that was it for me as far as books went but, as time has gone on, I’ve realised that I have more to say about sport, especially football, and about how it shaped me. I wasn’t born into a family with money, and education wasn’t for me – it’s sport that has given me all the chances and opportunities I’ve had in life. There are plenty of laughs and great stories in this book – and you won’t be surprised that I get a few things off my chest too – but hopefully there’s plenty to inspire you and to remind you that sport can transform people’s lives. That’s what life has taught me. I hope you get the message.
PART ONE BIKES
My road racing journey
So much of my life has revolved around road racing, and I’ve had an incredible journey. One minute I was a young lad poking my head through a hedge to watch my heroes race and the next I was wheeling Robert Dunlop’s bike on to the grid at world-famous circuits, working with him as he claimed victory after victory.
Being from the small town of Ballymoney in north Antrim, I was always aware of road racing. The North West 200 took place just a stone’s throw from where I grew up. I went fairly regularly on Sunday-school trips to Portstewart and Portrush ‘to see the sea’ but it wasn’t until I was eight that I saw my first road race. My big brother, Lawrence, and some of his mates decided to walk the twelve miles from my grandmother’s house in Balnamore to the North West circuit, leaving early in the morning. I was armed with a brown paper bag of tomato sandwiches and kitted out in a pair of worn-out gutties. It was never going to end well, and it turned out to be a journey I would never wish to repeat or inflict on my worst enemy. Lawrence and his pals kept telling me that the race was just over the next hill. They told me that for about six miles. But there was no sign of the sea. I was so tired.
When we finally arrived, the race had already started and the only vantage point left was the roof of the public toilets, which were on the approach into Portstewart. We scrambled up there and watched the bikes flying down to the harbour. The smell of two-stroke was everywhere and the sensation of speed was incredible. I was smitten. I have no memory of how we got home but I do remember feeling that I had had a brilliant experience, even though I had blistered feet and had discovered on arrival that my tomato sandwiches had fallen out of the arse of my sodden brown paper bag.
I got to know a lot more about road racing when I met Jackie Graham, who was Joey Dunlop’s mechanic – a man who was well and truly hooked on the sport. He was courting my aunt Sally, my mum’s sister, and he and Sally used to come to my mum’s house to visit frequently. Jackie used to take me out on the back of his Triumph Bonneville. I would have been about twelve then, and he scared the shit out of me as we sped around. My mum was always telling him not to go so fast but once we were out of her sight, he went like the clappers. It was scary and exhilarating – and gave me an early insight into why people race and the buzz they get.
Jackie was a genius with machinery – the most gifted mechanical engineer I have ever met. He was a foreman fitter at Corfield’s camera factory in Ballymoney, fixing the cameras when they broke. In his spare time he loved working on bikes. Eventually, he left Corfield’s and, after a stint at Sherwood Medical Industries as a machine setter engineer, he set up his own motorcycle tuning and repair business, and started working as a mechanic, fettling Joey’s bikes in his spare time. Jackie’s mum, Martha, and Joey’s dad, Willie, were brother and sister, so the boys were full cousins, and they had the utmost respect for each other.
I formed a very strong bond with Jackie, one that I still have to this day. My father had died when I was two and Jackie became a kind of father figure to me – as well as the runs on the bike, he’d take me fishing (illegally, more often than not). We used to wade through the river in the dark, the water chest-high, Jackie poking the bank to disturb the fish while I ‘ginnled’ them with a wire mesh net. We never failed to catch a few.
When I was a teenager, football was my first love but the bikes were a close second. I had divided loyalties – sometimes I’d be playing in an Irish League game and I’d be thinking about the road race that was being run that day. One half of me wanted to go to the football and the other half wanted to go to the race. Initially I made my career in football, but the bikes got me in the end. In the latter part of my playing career, I was suffering with a groin injury and couldn’t play for long without constant pain, and that made the pull of the bikes even stronger.
I had always known the Dunlops, of course. I had gone to school with Joey – he used to talk to me about football and I used to talk to him about the bikes. Later, Joey’s success on the bikes meant that everyone knew him. I was also aware of up-and-coming Robert. I remember seeing him at the Mid-Antrim and being impressed. Joey by that stage was a star, making headlines and setting records, but Robert was a real talent too. In 1988, Jackie told me Robert was struggling for space to work on his bikes, and that’s when I offered him my workshop. Fairly soon, I started working with Robert part time and then pretty much full time as his mechanic and mentor – we went everywhere together.
Robert and I ended up working together for over twenty years. We were a small outfit and that suited us just fine. Very quickly, we bonded – we had a similar sense of humour – and that bond became deeper as we got to know one another. There was trust and respect between us. He knew that I would do anything to help him and I knew that he would do anything he could to fulfil the faith I had in him. He became the younger brother I never had. Most of the time it was just the two of us, heads down, at the bikes. We were often on the road and, during those twenty years, we did all the major road races in Northern Ireland and all of the smaller races across the island, as well as the Isle of Man TT multiple times. We also travelled to places like Mettet in Belgium and as far as Macau in southern China to race.
Now and again, Robert and I got to travel in style to races but most of the time we used whatever mode of transport was the cheapest. We sometimes went by boat to the Isle of Man TT but more often than not we took small, private planes – kites, we used to call them – from Newtownards or Aghadowey airstrips. And we had one particularly memorable trip from the City of Derry airport.
A man I knew had a small three-seater plane and he offered to fly Robert and me to the island for a keen price. However, on the day we were due to depart, the weather was awful – gale-force winds and torrential rain. It was so bad that I got in touch with the pilot to check if the flight was going ahead. To my surprise, he said he was still happy to take the plane up. Robert’s brother Jim drove us from Ballymoney to the airport and the weather was so bad that even he said that nobody in their right mind would go up in a wee plane on a day like that.
When we arrived, the pilot was waiting for us in reception and confirmed that we were flying. If I was in a similar situation now, I wouldn’t dream of taking that flight, but I was a lot younger back then and so was Robert. I wasn’t surprised that Robert was happy to fly, though – he was much more of a daredevil than me and nothing fazed him. In fact, I often felt the greater the challenge or the greater the risk, the more Robert relished it.
On the runway was what seemed to me the smallest aeroplane ever built, with just two tiny seats in the back and one at the front for the pilot. It was so small that it was something of an ordeal to even get inside the bloody thing, but eventually all three of us clambered in and got settled – the pilot was practically sitting on our knees. Even on the tarmac, the wee plane was being quite badly buffeted by the wind and rain, but soon we were hurtling up the runway and were airborne. We couldn’t have been more than fifty feet up when we were completely engulfed in cloud. It was like being wrapped in cotton wool – but not in a good way. The plane was tiny and our faces were practically jammed against the windows as the cloud pressed in on us. I genuinely feared for my life.
I kept telling myself that the pilot knew what he was doing and that I had to trust him – but I was also concerned that there was a considerable amount of rain leaking in through the pilot’s door and that the floor of the plane was getting very wet. During the flight, which felt like a roller-coaster ride, I could clearly see that the pilot, who was a lovely man, was sweating profusely. I suspected he knew it had been a mistake to take the plane up.
Despite the horrendous flying conditions and me being filled to the throat with the fear of God, any time I glanced over at Robert he was smiling. He was either completely fearless or he was trying his damnedest to alleviate my fears – my guess is a combination of both. It seemed like an eternity but at last the pilot told us we were over the Isle of Man (I could have kissed him), and that he was about to begin his descent towards Ronaldsway airport. As we descended from the extremely low cloud, however, we saw that we were, in fact, over the Calf of Man, which is nowhere near the airport. The pilot had seriously miscalculated and had to quickly pull us back up again, only just clearing the trees and other obstacles around us. A few minutes later he took us down again and this time when we emerged from the clouds we were over the airport and, barring the odd bump, hop, and skip, he landed the plane safely.
It felt good to be alive and in one piece. Even Robert looked pale. There wasn’t much chat during the half-hour car journey from the airport to the island capital Douglas, where we were always based. We all rode our luck that day and, although it was a terrifying experience, it was one of those moments that I shared with Robert and I treasure it for that.
Those years with Robert were a roller-coaster time, and my 2017 book, Full Throttle: Robert Dunlop, Road Racing and Me, tells that story in detail. The highs were plenty because of Robert’s talent. He won so many major international races – the NW 200, Isle of Man TT, Ulster Grand Prix, British Championship and Macau Grand Prix – but when he had a crash, it was generally always a big one, and when he fell off, he always seemed to hit something hard. If there was a pole on a mile-long road, you could be sure that Robert would hit it. And yet I could count on the fingers of one hand the number of times he fell off due to rider error. Those crashes never dented his confidence, though the ’94 crash at the Isle of Man TT, when his rear wheel broke up, virtually finished him in terms of racing any machinery above 125cc class. His career had been headed towards World Superbikes, but the crash put an end to that.
Together, Robert and I experienced some very public lows in the sport – some awful accidents and the loss of fellow riders and, especially in the early days, the real struggle to get sponsorship. I always felt that Robert didn’t get the investment he deserved. I remember one occasion when Joey had to pull out of a race and we were hopeful that Robert might get his allocation of Michelin tyres. It didn’t work out in the end – we were refused. We had the last laugh, though, because Robert went on to win the race anyway. Which was almost always the story for us – the lows were more than compensated for by the highs. A real highlight was when Robert became British champion in 1991, winning every race bar one (even though he crossed the finish line in first place). He became a regular winner against the world’s best at the major international events, and no event was more memorable than his win at the Macau Grand Prix in 1989. We were so chuffed to see the Dunlop name on one of the few trophies that didn’t already have it.
Robert was such a bright talent when I started working with him, full of potential. I’d like to think I brought him more focus and self-belief. It became clear to me that although his