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(Date Posted:08/06/2006 11:45 PM)
The motorcycling world today is mourning the death of a Yakima man who
changed the face of U.S. motocross. Jim Pomeroy, known for being the first American to win a World
Championship Motocross event, died Sunday morning while driving near
Tampico. "When the book of motocross is written, Jim Pomeroy will be in the
first chapter," said Bill Grubin, owner of Grubin and Company
motorcycle shop on Fruitvale Boulevard. Pomeroy, 53, was driving west on Ahtanum Road with his 9-year-old
daughter, Jamie, about 10:45 a.m. Sunday. He was 15 miles west of
Yakima when he left the road, according to a news release from the
Washington State Patrol. His 1979 Jeep CJ5 struck a telephone pole guy wire and came to rest on
its side. Pomeroy died at the scene. His daughter sustained minor
injuries she was treated and released from Yakima Valley Memorial
Hospital. The cause of the accident was driver inattention, according to the news
release. Pomeroy lived in Yakima with his wife, Linda, and their daughter. He
came from a long line of motocross racers and his father, Don, who died
last year, owned Pomeroy Cycle Shop in Sunnyside and Yakima for many
years. Pomeroy, who was born in Sunnyside, gained fame in 1973 when at the age
of 20 he became the first person to win his debut world championship
event, the Spanish Grand Prix. It was the first American victory at a
world Grand Prix event, and Pomeroy took the lead in the overall World
Motocross Championships that year. "Up until that point the Europeans dominated the world in the sport of
motocross or motorcycling," Grubin said. "Once Jim Pomeroy won that
race, he changed the face of motorcycling in the United States
forever." Winning many more important races before he retired from professional
motocross in 1980, Pomeroy helped the United States come to dominate
the motocross scene. After retiring, he remained active in the sport by
working with young riders at motocross schools. In 1999, the American Motorcyclist Association celebrated Pomeroy`s
success by inducting him into the Motorcycle Hall of Fame. "He was my childhood hero," said Grubin, a friend of Pomeroy`s since
the two met in Yakima in 1989. "I was driving down the road one day with a Bultaco Pursang (motocross
bike)," Grubin said. "I had it in the back of my pickup and he ran me
down and said, `Where did you get that bike?"` Although Pomeroy`s name is recognizable to any serious motocross fan
worldwide, he never had much attention at home in the Yakima Valley,
Grubin said. "Jim wasn`t the kind of guy who wanted the spotlight," he said. "He
made no enemies in the motocross world."
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