Cook Neilson B'Day

GG
Gleeb Gliber Galactica Gavorti
Tue, Aug 24, 2021 3:05 PM

Oh, Holy Happy Birthday Cook.  Please give Stepper a Hug while you're
receiving a virtual one at this time.

Thanks in advance Vicki for letting me re-post your lovely homage to Cook
here.
I remember the day well....

COOK'S LAST RIDE
https://vintagent1.rssing.com/chan-6278049/article30-live.html

https://www.rssing.com/index.php?zw=2123
https://www.rssing.com/contact.php?r=o6&u=%2F%2Fvintagent1.rssing.com%2Fchan-6278049%2Farticle30-live.html

By Vicki Smith, as posted in her excellent Ducati.net website:
Cook Neilson racing 'Old Blue' - a heavily modified Ducati 750SS - at the
Daytona Superbike race in 1977
"In 1969, Cook Neilson was 26 years old and
editor-in-chief of Cycle Magazine, the largest motorcycle magazine in the
world.  In those pre-internet days, if you were a motorcycle enthusiast,
magazines were your lifeblood to all things moto - new models, race results

  • but it might be 6 weeks before you got the news “hot off the press”.
    *Cycle *wasn’t the only magazine, but it might as well have been, so
    devoted were its followers. Cook was editor for 10 years and during that
    time he changed the vernacular of motorcycling, coining the term Superbike,
    and editing *Cycle *with a style of writing that set a gold standard.  He
    also introduced the multi-brand comparison test; getting the Brands to
    agree to the new concept of a heads-up test, surely saved more than a few
    lives. Cycle was known for its “can’t be bought” honesty, and the
    Japanese manufacturers understood honest reviews were important to their
    development; one-on-one brake and handling tests began the march towards
    better and safer motorcycles.  That’s why Cook remains important to
    motorcycling. But its not why he's important to Ducati, and that’s where
    this story begins.

[image: image.png]

1971 – Bridgehampton raceway - Ducati’s US importer, Mike Berliner invited
Cook Neilson and his managing editor, Phil Schilling, to test a prototype
750cc Ducati v-twin.  After a few laps it was clear to both men the bike
was something special. They agreed to give more formal feedback on the
styling which they felt could use some help; Phil gave Berliner a few
drawings with styling suggestions, and eventually the production bike made
its way to the US as the 750GT, which incorporated most of Cook and Phil’s
suggestions.  Cook bought one and in 1973 entered it in a race at
Riverside. Not long after he upgraded to the new 'desmo' 750 SuperSport,
and began the project documented in the 'Racer Road' series, which was
followed by over a half a million readers. Always good at coining a catchy
phrase, they called their Ducati racer 'The California Hot Rod', but to
Cook and Phil she was just 'Old Blue'.
[image: image.png]

If you've read the series you know their mesmerizing tales of long nights
working on Blue with the radio playing in the background, clever fixes with
the help of friends, and bleary mornings that came too soon.  It must have
been a very crowded place... Cook, Phil, the Ducati and 500,000 readers
waited for the mailman to bring the next installment.  No one expected a
fairy tale ending but that’s what they got. They won the Daytona Superbike
race in 1977 which really put Ducati on the map in America, delivering a
market which until then had been very small.  The Ducati factory
acknowledges that Daytona Superbike win as the most important Ducati race
victory in America to this day; Ducati might not have survived the late
1970s without the American sales generated.  Cook Neilson and Phil
Schilling remain to this day the two most important people in US Ducati
history. And that brings us to Cook’s last ride.

It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was
fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him
plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever
'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that
make the 848 worth more?  All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion
riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked
George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood
behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on
rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space
began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and
Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North
America worked with Cook on the Cycle World“New Blue” project), Alan
Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene.  I was surrounded by
people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was
something”.  The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off,
past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber
staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all
knew, the end of an era."
[image: image.png]

Barber Motorsports Park, October 2012– Cook decided quite some time ago
that when and if he took his last ride on a racetrack it would be at
Barber, on “Deja Blue”, an exact replica of the California Hot Rod. It had
been 35 years since he and Phil won Daytona, and the original 'Old Blue'
quietly resides in a collector's living room, atop an Oriental rug, that
glorious music bottled inside the engine.  A few years ago, the Barber
museum staff commissioned Rich Lambrechts of DesmoPro to replicate the
Daytona 750SS, and exact, which is so accurate that both Cook and Phil
assumed the Barber Museum had managed to buy Old Blue.

[image: image.png]
Deja Blue was built as a labor of love, and in anticipation of Cook's last
ride, the Barber Festival weekend felt like stepping back in time. Some of
the original Cycle staff were there, and looking thru the garage door you
could see Cook’s wife Stepper quietly reading in a corner, as Cook (in his
Daytona leathers) conferred with Phil, while Barber staff fueled the
machine and fiddled with the bike.  '1977' is the name of an Instagram
filter; this scene could have been the inspiration. Cook and his friends
have attended the Barber Vintage Festival every year, as a Grand Marshall
and Hall of Fame’r, he rode demonstrations every year, but in 2011 he took
a tumble, ironically on the Ducati with which 848 Jason DiSalvo had won the
Daytona 200.  A sudden rain shower combined with a slick paint stripe, the
848′s quarter-turn throttle stepped the bike out, and down it went.
[image: image.png]
It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was
fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him
plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever
'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that
make the 848 worth more?  All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion
riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked
George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood
behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on
rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space
began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and
Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North
America worked with Cook on the Cycle World“New Blue” project), Alan
Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene.  I was surrounded by
people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was
something”.  The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off,
past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber
staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all
knew, the end of an era."

[image: image.png]

100 Exrtra Points To Vicki For Quoting David Letterman :-)

Much Love To All!

Ride Well.

Gabriel

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jack Ward jaxn51@gmail.com
To: Ducati Owners Group ducati@list.ducati.net
Cc:
Bcc:
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2021 08:36:07 -0400
Subject: [Ducati] Cook
Happy Birthday, Cook! May you have a hundred more.

Jack Ward
Knoxville, TN

All things in moderation (Especially moderation).

> > Oh, Holy Happy Birthday Cook. Please give Stepper a Hug while you're > receiving a virtual one at this time. Thanks in advance Vicki for letting me re-post your lovely homage to Cook here. I remember the day well.... COOK'S LAST RIDE <https://vintagent1.rssing.com/chan-6278049/article30-live.html> <https://www.rssing.com/index.php?zw=2123> <https://www.rssing.com/contact.php?r=o6&u=%2F%2Fvintagent1.rssing.com%2Fchan-6278049%2Farticle30-live.html> By Vicki Smith, as posted in her excellent Ducati.net website: *Cook Neilson racing 'Old Blue' - a heavily modified Ducati 750SS - at the Daytona Superbike race in 1977*"In 1969, Cook Neilson was 26 years old and editor-in-chief of *Cycle Magazine*, the largest motorcycle magazine in the world. In those pre-internet days, if you were a motorcycle enthusiast, magazines were your lifeblood to all things moto - new models, race results - but it might be 6 weeks before you got the news “hot off the press”. *Cycle *wasn’t the only magazine, but it might as well have been, so devoted were its followers. Cook was editor for 10 years and during that time he changed the vernacular of motorcycling, coining the term Superbike, and editing *Cycle *with a style of writing that set a gold standard. He also introduced the multi-brand comparison test; getting the Brands to agree to the new concept of a heads-up test, surely saved more than a few lives. *Cycle* was known for its *“can’t be bought”* honesty, and the Japanese manufacturers understood honest reviews were important to their development; one-on-one brake and handling tests began the march towards better and safer motorcycles. That’s why Cook remains important to motorcycling. But its not why he's important to Ducati, and that’s where this story begins. [image: image.png] *1971 – Bridgehampton raceway -* Ducati’s US importer, Mike Berliner invited Cook Neilson and his managing editor, Phil Schilling, to test a prototype 750cc Ducati v-twin. After a few laps it was clear to both men the bike was something special. They agreed to give more formal feedback on the styling which they felt could use some help; Phil gave Berliner a few drawings with styling suggestions, and eventually the production bike made its way to the US as the 750GT, which incorporated most of Cook and Phil’s suggestions. Cook bought one and in 1973 entered it in a race at Riverside. Not long after he upgraded to the new 'desmo' 750 SuperSport, and began the project documented in the 'Racer Road' series, which was followed by over a half a million readers. Always good at coining a catchy phrase, they called their Ducati racer 'The California Hot Rod', but to Cook and Phil she was just 'Old Blue'. [image: image.png] If you've read the series you know their mesmerizing tales of long nights working on Blue with the radio playing in the background, clever fixes with the help of friends, and bleary mornings that came too soon. It must have been a very crowded place... Cook, Phil, the Ducati and 500,000 readers waited for the mailman to bring the next installment. No one expected a fairy tale ending but that’s what they got. They won the Daytona Superbike race in 1977 which really put Ducati on the map in America, delivering a market which until then had been very small. The Ducati factory acknowledges that Daytona Superbike win as the most important Ducati race victory in America to this day; Ducati might not have survived the late 1970s without the American sales generated. Cook Neilson and Phil Schilling remain to this day the two most important people in US Ducati history. And that brings us to Cook’s last ride. It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever 'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that make the 848 worth more? All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North America worked with Cook on the *Cycle World*“New Blue” project), Alan Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene. I was surrounded by people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was something”. The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off, past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all knew, the end of an era." [image: image.png] *Barber Motorsports Park, October 2012*– Cook decided quite some time ago that when and if he took his last ride on a racetrack it would be at Barber, on “Deja Blue”, an exact replica of the California Hot Rod. It had been 35 years since he and Phil won Daytona, and the original 'Old Blue' quietly resides in a collector's living room, atop an Oriental rug, that glorious music bottled inside the engine. A few years ago, the Barber museum staff commissioned Rich Lambrechts of DesmoPro to replicate the Daytona 750SS, and exact, which is so accurate that both Cook and Phil assumed the Barber Museum had managed to buy Old Blue. [image: image.png] Deja Blue was built as a labor of love, and in anticipation of Cook's last ride, the Barber Festival weekend felt like stepping back in time. Some of the original *Cycle* staff were there, and looking thru the garage door you could see Cook’s wife Stepper quietly reading in a corner, as Cook (in his Daytona leathers) conferred with Phil, while Barber staff fueled the machine and fiddled with the bike. '1977' is the name of an Instagram filter; this scene could have been the inspiration. Cook and his friends have attended the Barber Vintage Festival every year, as a Grand Marshall and Hall of Fame’r, he rode demonstrations every year, but in 2011 he took a tumble, ironically on the Ducati with which 848 Jason DiSalvo had won the Daytona 200. A sudden rain shower combined with a slick paint stripe, the 848′s quarter-turn throttle stepped the bike out, and down it went. [image: image.png] It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever 'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that make the 848 worth more? All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North America worked with Cook on the *Cycle World*“New Blue” project), Alan Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene. I was surrounded by people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was something”. The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off, past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all knew, the end of an era." [image: image.png] > 100 Exrtra Points To Vicki For Quoting David Letterman :-) > Much Love To All! Ride Well. Gabriel > > > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > From: Jack Ward <jaxn51@gmail.com> > To: Ducati Owners Group <ducati@list.ducati.net> > Cc: > Bcc: > Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2021 08:36:07 -0400 > Subject: [Ducati] Cook > Happy Birthday, Cook! May you have a hundred more. > > Jack Ward > Knoxville, TN > > > All things in moderation (Especially moderation).
JW
Jack Ward
Wed, Aug 25, 2021 1:34 AM

Thank you for that, Gabriel. Thanks to Vicki for the play by play.

Jack Ward
Knoxville, TN

On Tue, Aug 24, 2021, 11:06 AM Gleeb Gliber Galactica Gavorti <
uncleixel@gmail.com> wrote:

Oh, Holy Happy Birthday Cook.  Please give Stepper a Hug while you're

receiving a virtual one at this time.

Thanks in advance Vicki for letting me re-post your lovely homage to Cook
here.
I remember the day well....

COOK'S LAST RIDE
https://vintagent1.rssing.com/chan-6278049/article30-live.html

https://www.rssing.com/index.php?zw=2123

https://www.rssing.com/contact.php?r=o6&u=%2F%2Fvintagent1.rssing.com%2Fchan-6278049%2Farticle30-live.html

By Vicki Smith, as posted in her excellent Ducati.net website:
Cook Neilson racing 'Old Blue' - a heavily modified Ducati 750SS - at the
Daytona Superbike race in 1977
"In 1969, Cook Neilson was 26 years old
and editor-in-chief of Cycle Magazine, the largest motorcycle magazine
in the world.  In those pre-internet days, if you were a motorcycle
enthusiast, magazines were your lifeblood to all things moto - new models,
race results - but it might be 6 weeks before you got the news “hot off the
press”.  *Cycle *wasn’t the only magazine, but it might as well have
been, so devoted were its followers. Cook was editor for 10 years and
during that time he changed the vernacular of motorcycling, coining the
term Superbike, and editing *Cycle *with a style of writing that set a
gold standard.  He also introduced the multi-brand comparison test; getting
the Brands to agree to the new concept of a heads-up test, surely saved
more than a few lives. Cycle was known for its “can’t be bought” honesty,
and the Japanese manufacturers understood honest reviews were important to
their development; one-on-one brake and handling tests began the march
towards better and safer motorcycles.  That’s why Cook remains important to
motorcycling. But its not why he's important to Ducati, and that’s where
this story begins.

[image: image.png]

1971 – Bridgehampton raceway - Ducati’s US importer, Mike Berliner invited
Cook Neilson and his managing editor, Phil Schilling, to test a prototype
750cc Ducati v-twin.  After a few laps it was clear to both men the bike
was something special. They agreed to give more formal feedback on the
styling which they felt could use some help; Phil gave Berliner a few
drawings with styling suggestions, and eventually the production bike made
its way to the US as the 750GT, which incorporated most of Cook and
Phil’s suggestions.  Cook bought one and in 1973 entered it in a race at
Riverside. Not long after he upgraded to the new 'desmo' 750 SuperSport,
and began the project documented in the 'Racer Road' series, which was
followed by over a half a million readers. Always good at coining a catchy
phrase, they called their Ducati racer 'The California Hot Rod', but to
Cook and Phil she was just 'Old Blue'.
[image: image.png]

If you've read the series you know their mesmerizing tales of long nights
working on Blue with the radio playing in the background, clever fixes with
the help of friends, and bleary mornings that came too soon.  It must have
been a very crowded place... Cook, Phil, the Ducati and 500,000 readers
waited for the mailman to bring the next installment.  No one expected a
fairy tale ending but that’s what they got. They won the Daytona
Superbike race in 1977 which really put Ducati on the map in America,
delivering a market which until then had been very small.  The Ducati
factory acknowledges that Daytona Superbike win as the most important
Ducati race victory in America to this day; Ducati might not have survived
the late 1970s without the American sales generated.  Cook Neilson and Phil
Schilling remain to this day the two most important people in US Ducati
history. And that brings us to Cook’s last ride.

It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was
fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him
plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever
'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that
make the 848 worth more?  All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion
riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked
George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood
behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on
rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space
began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and
Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North
America worked with Cook on the Cycle World“New Blue” project), Alan
Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene.  I was surrounded by
people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was
something”.  The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off,
past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber
staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all
knew, the end of an era."
[image: image.png]

Barber Motorsports Park, October 2012– Cook decided quite some time ago
that when and if he took his last ride on a racetrack it would be at
Barber, on “Deja Blue”, an exact replica of the California Hot Rod. It had
been 35 years since he and Phil won Daytona, and the original 'Old Blue'
quietly resides in a collector's living room, atop an Oriental rug, that
glorious music bottled inside the engine.  A few years ago, the Barber
museum staff commissioned Rich Lambrechts of DesmoPro to replicate the
Daytona 750SS, and exact, which is so accurate that both Cook and Phil
assumed the Barber Museum had managed to buy Old Blue.

[image: image.png]
Deja Blue was built as a labor of love, and in anticipation of Cook's last
ride, the Barber Festival weekend felt like stepping back in time. Some of
the original Cycle staff were there, and looking thru the garage door
you could see Cook’s wife Stepper quietly reading in a corner, as Cook (in
his Daytona leathers) conferred with Phil, while Barber staff fueled the
machine and fiddled with the bike.  '1977' is the name of an Instagram
filter; this scene could have been the inspiration. Cook and his friends
have attended the Barber Vintage Festival every year, as a Grand Marshall
and Hall of Fame’r, he rode demonstrations every year, but in 2011 he took
a tumble, ironically on the Ducati with which 848 Jason DiSalvo had won
the Daytona 200.  A sudden rain shower combined with a slick paint stripe,
the 848′s quarter-turn throttle stepped the bike out, and down it went.
[image: image.png]
It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was
fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him
plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever
'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that
make the 848 worth more?  All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion
riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked
George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood
behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on
rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space
began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and
Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North
America worked with Cook on the Cycle World“New Blue” project), Alan
Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene.  I was surrounded by
people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was
something”.  The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off,
past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber
staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all
knew, the end of an era."

[image: image.png]

100 Exrtra Points To Vicki For Quoting David Letterman :-)

Much Love To All!

Ride Well.

Gabriel

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jack Ward jaxn51@gmail.com
To: Ducati Owners Group ducati@list.ducati.net
Cc:
Bcc:
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2021 08:36:07 -0400
Subject: [Ducati] Cook
Happy Birthday, Cook! May you have a hundred more.

Jack Ward
Knoxville, TN

All things in moderation (Especially moderation).

To get the links and updates on all today's Ducati news:
http://www.ductalk.com/
and
https://www.facebook.com/ducnet


Ducati mailing list -- ducati@list.ducati.net
To unsubscribe send an email to ducati-leave@list.ducati.net
Mailto: %(user_address)s

Thank you for that, Gabriel. Thanks to Vicki for the play by play. Jack Ward Knoxville, TN On Tue, Aug 24, 2021, 11:06 AM Gleeb Gliber Galactica Gavorti < uncleixel@gmail.com> wrote: > Oh, Holy Happy Birthday Cook. Please give Stepper a Hug while you're >> receiving a virtual one at this time. > > > > > Thanks in advance Vicki for letting me re-post your lovely homage to Cook > here. > I remember the day well.... > > COOK'S LAST RIDE > <https://vintagent1.rssing.com/chan-6278049/article30-live.html> > > <https://www.rssing.com/index.php?zw=2123> > > <https://www.rssing.com/contact.php?r=o6&u=%2F%2Fvintagent1.rssing.com%2Fchan-6278049%2Farticle30-live.html> > > By Vicki Smith, as posted in her excellent Ducati.net website: > *Cook Neilson racing 'Old Blue' - a heavily modified Ducati 750SS - at the > Daytona Superbike race in 1977*"In 1969, Cook Neilson was 26 years old > and editor-in-chief of *Cycle Magazine*, the largest motorcycle magazine > in the world. In those pre-internet days, if you were a motorcycle > enthusiast, magazines were your lifeblood to all things moto - new models, > race results - but it might be 6 weeks before you got the news “hot off the > press”. *Cycle *wasn’t the only magazine, but it might as well have > been, so devoted were its followers. Cook was editor for 10 years and > during that time he changed the vernacular of motorcycling, coining the > term Superbike, and editing *Cycle *with a style of writing that set a > gold standard. He also introduced the multi-brand comparison test; getting > the Brands to agree to the new concept of a heads-up test, surely saved > more than a few lives. *Cycle* was known for its *“can’t be bought”* honesty, > and the Japanese manufacturers understood honest reviews were important to > their development; one-on-one brake and handling tests began the march > towards better and safer motorcycles. That’s why Cook remains important to > motorcycling. But its not why he's important to Ducati, and that’s where > this story begins. > > [image: image.png] > > *1971 – Bridgehampton raceway -* Ducati’s US importer, Mike Berliner invited > Cook Neilson and his managing editor, Phil Schilling, to test a prototype > 750cc Ducati v-twin. After a few laps it was clear to both men the bike > was something special. They agreed to give more formal feedback on the > styling which they felt could use some help; Phil gave Berliner a few > drawings with styling suggestions, and eventually the production bike made > its way to the US as the 750GT, which incorporated most of Cook and > Phil’s suggestions. Cook bought one and in 1973 entered it in a race at > Riverside. Not long after he upgraded to the new 'desmo' 750 SuperSport, > and began the project documented in the 'Racer Road' series, which was > followed by over a half a million readers. Always good at coining a catchy > phrase, they called their Ducati racer 'The California Hot Rod', but to > Cook and Phil she was just 'Old Blue'. > [image: image.png] > > If you've read the series you know their mesmerizing tales of long nights > working on Blue with the radio playing in the background, clever fixes with > the help of friends, and bleary mornings that came too soon. It must have > been a very crowded place... Cook, Phil, the Ducati and 500,000 readers > waited for the mailman to bring the next installment. No one expected a > fairy tale ending but that’s what they got. They won the Daytona > Superbike race in 1977 which really put Ducati on the map in America, > delivering a market which until then had been very small. The Ducati > factory acknowledges that Daytona Superbike win as the most important > Ducati race victory in America to this day; Ducati might not have survived > the late 1970s without the American sales generated. Cook Neilson and Phil > Schilling remain to this day the two most important people in US Ducati > history. And that brings us to Cook’s last ride. > > It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was > fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him > plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever > 'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that > make the 848 worth more? All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion > riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked > George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood > behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on > rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space > began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and > Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North > America worked with Cook on the *Cycle World*“New Blue” project), Alan > Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene. I was surrounded by > people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was > something”. The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off, > past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber > staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all > knew, the end of an era." > [image: image.png] > > *Barber Motorsports Park, October 2012*– Cook decided quite some time ago > that when and if he took his last ride on a racetrack it would be at > Barber, on “Deja Blue”, an exact replica of the California Hot Rod. It had > been 35 years since he and Phil won Daytona, and the original 'Old Blue' > quietly resides in a collector's living room, atop an Oriental rug, that > glorious music bottled inside the engine. A few years ago, the Barber > museum staff commissioned Rich Lambrechts of DesmoPro to replicate the > Daytona 750SS, and exact, which is so accurate that both Cook and Phil > assumed the Barber Museum had managed to buy Old Blue. > > > [image: image.png] > Deja Blue was built as a labor of love, and in anticipation of Cook's last > ride, the Barber Festival weekend felt like stepping back in time. Some of > the original *Cycle* staff were there, and looking thru the garage door > you could see Cook’s wife Stepper quietly reading in a corner, as Cook (in > his Daytona leathers) conferred with Phil, while Barber staff fueled the > machine and fiddled with the bike. '1977' is the name of an Instagram > filter; this scene could have been the inspiration. Cook and his friends > have attended the Barber Vintage Festival every year, as a Grand Marshall > and Hall of Fame’r, he rode demonstrations every year, but in 2011 he took > a tumble, ironically on the Ducati with which 848 Jason DiSalvo had won > the Daytona 200. A sudden rain shower combined with a slick paint stripe, > the 848′s quarter-turn throttle stepped the bike out, and down it went. > [image: image.png] > It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was > fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him > plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever > 'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that > make the 848 worth more? All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion > riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked > George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood > behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on > rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space > began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and > Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North > America worked with Cook on the *Cycle World*“New Blue” project), Alan > Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene. I was surrounded by > people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was > something”. The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off, > past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber > staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all > knew, the end of an era." > > [image: image.png] > > >> 100 Exrtra Points To Vicki For Quoting David Letterman :-) >> > > > Much Love To All! > > Ride Well. > > Gabriel > >> >> >> >> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >> From: Jack Ward <jaxn51@gmail.com> >> To: Ducati Owners Group <ducati@list.ducati.net> >> Cc: >> Bcc: >> Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2021 08:36:07 -0400 >> Subject: [Ducati] Cook >> Happy Birthday, Cook! May you have a hundred more. >> >> Jack Ward >> Knoxville, TN >> >> >> > > > All things in moderation (Especially moderation). > > > > > > > > > > > To get the links and updates on all today's Ducati news: > http://www.ductalk.com/ > and > https://www.facebook.com/ducnet > _____________________ > Ducati mailing list -- ducati@list.ducati.net > To unsubscribe send an email to ducati-leave@list.ducati.net > Mailto: %(user_address)s
PM
Paul March
Wed, Aug 25, 2021 2:06 AM

Happy B-Day Cook!

Paul

On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 9:36 PM Jack Ward jaxn51@gmail.com wrote:

Thank you for that, Gabriel. Thanks to Vicki for the play by play.

Jack Ward
Knoxville, TN

On Tue, Aug 24, 2021, 11:06 AM Gleeb Gliber Galactica Gavorti <
uncleixel@gmail.com> wrote:

Oh, Holy Happy Birthday Cook.  Please give Stepper a Hug while you're

receiving a virtual one at this time.

Thanks in advance Vicki for letting me re-post your lovely homage to Cook
here.
I remember the day well....

COOK'S LAST RIDE
https://vintagent1.rssing.com/chan-6278049/article30-live.html

https://www.rssing.com/index.php?zw=2123

https://www.rssing.com/contact.php?r=o6&u=%2F%2Fvintagent1.rssing.com%2Fchan-6278049%2Farticle30-live.html

By Vicki Smith, as posted in her excellent Ducati.net website:
Cook Neilson racing 'Old Blue' - a heavily modified Ducati 750SS - at
the Daytona Superbike race in 1977
"In 1969, Cook Neilson was 26 years
old and editor-in-chief of Cycle Magazine, the largest motorcycle
magazine in the world.  In those pre-internet days, if you were a
motorcycle enthusiast, magazines were your lifeblood to all things moto -
new models, race results - but it might be 6 weeks before you got the news
“hot off the press”.  *Cycle *wasn’t the only magazine, but it might as
well have been, so devoted were its followers. Cook was editor for 10 years
and during that time he changed the vernacular of motorcycling, coining the
term Superbike, and editing *Cycle *with a style of writing that set a
gold standard.  He also introduced the multi-brand comparison test; getting
the Brands to agree to the new concept of a heads-up test, surely saved
more than a few lives. Cycle was known for its “can’t be bought” honesty,
and the Japanese manufacturers understood honest reviews were important to
their development; one-on-one brake and handling tests began the march
towards better and safer motorcycles.  That’s why Cook remains important to
motorcycling. But its not why he's important to Ducati, and that’s where
this story begins.

[image: image.png]

1971 – Bridgehampton raceway - Ducati’s US importer, Mike Berliner invited
Cook Neilson and his managing editor, Phil Schilling, to test a prototype
750cc Ducati v-twin.  After a few laps it was clear to both men the bike
was something special. They agreed to give more formal feedback on the
styling which they felt could use some help; Phil gave Berliner a few
drawings with styling suggestions, and eventually the production bike made
its way to the US as the 750GT, which incorporated most of Cook and
Phil’s suggestions.  Cook bought one and in 1973 entered it in a race at
Riverside. Not long after he upgraded to the new 'desmo' 750 SuperSport,
and began the project documented in the 'Racer Road' series, which was
followed by over a half a million readers. Always good at coining a catchy
phrase, they called their Ducati racer 'The California Hot Rod', but to
Cook and Phil she was just 'Old Blue'.
[image: image.png]

If you've read the series you know their mesmerizing tales of long nights
working on Blue with the radio playing in the background, clever fixes with
the help of friends, and bleary mornings that came too soon.  It must have
been a very crowded place... Cook, Phil, the Ducati and 500,000 readers
waited for the mailman to bring the next installment.  No one expected a
fairy tale ending but that’s what they got. They won the Daytona
Superbike race in 1977 which really put Ducati on the map in America,
delivering a market which until then had been very small.  The Ducati
factory acknowledges that Daytona Superbike win as the most important
Ducati race victory in America to this day; Ducati might not have survived
the late 1970s without the American sales generated.  Cook Neilson and Phil
Schilling remain to this day the two most important people in US Ducati
history. And that brings us to Cook’s last ride.

It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was
fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him
plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever
'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that
make the 848 worth more?  All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion
riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked
George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood
behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on
rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space
began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and
Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North
America worked with Cook on the Cycle World“New Blue” project), Alan
Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene.  I was surrounded by
people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was
something”.  The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off,
past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber
staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all
knew, the end of an era."
[image: image.png]

Barber Motorsports Park, October 2012– Cook decided quite some time
ago that when and if he took his last ride on a racetrack it would be at
Barber, on “Deja Blue”, an exact replica of the California Hot Rod. It had
been 35 years since he and Phil won Daytona, and the original 'Old Blue'
quietly resides in a collector's living room, atop an Oriental rug, that
glorious music bottled inside the engine.  A few years ago, the Barber
museum staff commissioned Rich Lambrechts of DesmoPro to replicate the
Daytona 750SS, and exact, which is so accurate that both Cook and Phil
assumed the Barber Museum had managed to buy Old Blue.

[image: image.png]
Deja Blue was built as a labor of love, and in anticipation of Cook's
last ride, the Barber Festival weekend felt like stepping back in time.
Some of the original Cycle staff were there, and looking thru the
garage door you could see Cook’s wife Stepper quietly reading in a corner,
as Cook (in his Daytona leathers) conferred with Phil, while Barber staff
fueled the machine and fiddled with the bike.  '1977' is the name of an Instagram
filter; this scene could have been the inspiration. Cook and his friends
have attended the Barber Vintage Festival every year, as a Grand Marshall
and Hall of Fame’r, he rode demonstrations every year, but in 2011 he took
a tumble, ironically on the Ducati with which 848 Jason DiSalvo had won
the Daytona 200.  A sudden rain shower combined with a slick paint stripe,
the 848′s quarter-turn throttle stepped the bike out, and down it went.
[image: image.png]
It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was
fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him
plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever
'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that
make the 848 worth more?  All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion
riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked
George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood
behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on
rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space
began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and
Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North
America worked with Cook on the Cycle World“New Blue” project), Alan
Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene.  I was surrounded by
people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was
something”.  The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off,
past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber
staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all
knew, the end of an era."

[image: image.png]

100 Exrtra Points To Vicki For Quoting David Letterman :-)

Much Love To All!

Ride Well.

Gabriel

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jack Ward jaxn51@gmail.com
To: Ducati Owners Group ducati@list.ducati.net
Cc:
Bcc:
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2021 08:36:07 -0400
Subject: [Ducati] Cook
Happy Birthday, Cook! May you have a hundred more.

Jack Ward
Knoxville, TN

All things in moderation (Especially moderation).

To get the links and updates on all today's Ducati news:
http://www.ductalk.com/
and
https://www.facebook.com/ducnet


Ducati mailing list -- ducati@list.ducati.net
To unsubscribe send an email to ducati-leave@list.ducati.net
Mailto: %(user_address)s

To get the links and updates on all today's Ducati news:
http://www.ductalk.com/
and
https://www.facebook.com/ducnet


Ducati mailing list -- ducati@list.ducati.net
To unsubscribe send an email to ducati-leave@list.ducati.net
Mailto: %(user_address)s

Happy B-Day Cook! Paul On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 9:36 PM Jack Ward <jaxn51@gmail.com> wrote: > Thank you for that, Gabriel. Thanks to Vicki for the play by play. > > Jack Ward > Knoxville, TN > > On Tue, Aug 24, 2021, 11:06 AM Gleeb Gliber Galactica Gavorti < > uncleixel@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Oh, Holy Happy Birthday Cook. Please give Stepper a Hug while you're >>> receiving a virtual one at this time. >> >> >> >> >> Thanks in advance Vicki for letting me re-post your lovely homage to Cook >> here. >> I remember the day well.... >> >> COOK'S LAST RIDE >> <https://vintagent1.rssing.com/chan-6278049/article30-live.html> >> >> <https://www.rssing.com/index.php?zw=2123> >> >> <https://www.rssing.com/contact.php?r=o6&u=%2F%2Fvintagent1.rssing.com%2Fchan-6278049%2Farticle30-live.html> >> >> By Vicki Smith, as posted in her excellent Ducati.net website: >> *Cook Neilson racing 'Old Blue' - a heavily modified Ducati 750SS - at >> the Daytona Superbike race in 1977*"In 1969, Cook Neilson was 26 years >> old and editor-in-chief of *Cycle Magazine*, the largest motorcycle >> magazine in the world. In those pre-internet days, if you were a >> motorcycle enthusiast, magazines were your lifeblood to all things moto - >> new models, race results - but it might be 6 weeks before you got the news >> “hot off the press”. *Cycle *wasn’t the only magazine, but it might as >> well have been, so devoted were its followers. Cook was editor for 10 years >> and during that time he changed the vernacular of motorcycling, coining the >> term Superbike, and editing *Cycle *with a style of writing that set a >> gold standard. He also introduced the multi-brand comparison test; getting >> the Brands to agree to the new concept of a heads-up test, surely saved >> more than a few lives. *Cycle* was known for its *“can’t be bought”* honesty, >> and the Japanese manufacturers understood honest reviews were important to >> their development; one-on-one brake and handling tests began the march >> towards better and safer motorcycles. That’s why Cook remains important to >> motorcycling. But its not why he's important to Ducati, and that’s where >> this story begins. >> >> [image: image.png] >> >> *1971 – Bridgehampton raceway -* Ducati’s US importer, Mike Berliner invited >> Cook Neilson and his managing editor, Phil Schilling, to test a prototype >> 750cc Ducati v-twin. After a few laps it was clear to both men the bike >> was something special. They agreed to give more formal feedback on the >> styling which they felt could use some help; Phil gave Berliner a few >> drawings with styling suggestions, and eventually the production bike made >> its way to the US as the 750GT, which incorporated most of Cook and >> Phil’s suggestions. Cook bought one and in 1973 entered it in a race at >> Riverside. Not long after he upgraded to the new 'desmo' 750 SuperSport, >> and began the project documented in the 'Racer Road' series, which was >> followed by over a half a million readers. Always good at coining a catchy >> phrase, they called their Ducati racer 'The California Hot Rod', but to >> Cook and Phil she was just 'Old Blue'. >> [image: image.png] >> >> If you've read the series you know their mesmerizing tales of long nights >> working on Blue with the radio playing in the background, clever fixes with >> the help of friends, and bleary mornings that came too soon. It must have >> been a very crowded place... Cook, Phil, the Ducati and 500,000 readers >> waited for the mailman to bring the next installment. No one expected a >> fairy tale ending but that’s what they got. They won the Daytona >> Superbike race in 1977 which really put Ducati on the map in America, >> delivering a market which until then had been very small. The Ducati >> factory acknowledges that Daytona Superbike win as the most important >> Ducati race victory in America to this day; Ducati might not have survived >> the late 1970s without the American sales generated. Cook Neilson and Phil >> Schilling remain to this day the two most important people in US Ducati >> history. And that brings us to Cook’s last ride. >> >> It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was >> fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him >> plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever >> 'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that >> make the 848 worth more? All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion >> riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked >> George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood >> behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on >> rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space >> began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and >> Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North >> America worked with Cook on the *Cycle World*“New Blue” project), Alan >> Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene. I was surrounded by >> people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was >> something”. The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off, >> past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber >> staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all >> knew, the end of an era." >> [image: image.png] >> >> *Barber Motorsports Park, October 2012*– Cook decided quite some time >> ago that when and if he took his last ride on a racetrack it would be at >> Barber, on “Deja Blue”, an exact replica of the California Hot Rod. It had >> been 35 years since he and Phil won Daytona, and the original 'Old Blue' >> quietly resides in a collector's living room, atop an Oriental rug, that >> glorious music bottled inside the engine. A few years ago, the Barber >> museum staff commissioned Rich Lambrechts of DesmoPro to replicate the >> Daytona 750SS, and exact, which is so accurate that both Cook and Phil >> assumed the Barber Museum had managed to buy Old Blue. >> >> >> [image: image.png] >> Deja Blue was built as a labor of love, and in anticipation of Cook's >> last ride, the Barber Festival weekend felt like stepping back in time. >> Some of the original *Cycle* staff were there, and looking thru the >> garage door you could see Cook’s wife Stepper quietly reading in a corner, >> as Cook (in his Daytona leathers) conferred with Phil, while Barber staff >> fueled the machine and fiddled with the bike. '1977' is the name of an Instagram >> filter; this scene could have been the inspiration. Cook and his friends >> have attended the Barber Vintage Festival every year, as a Grand Marshall >> and Hall of Fame’r, he rode demonstrations every year, but in 2011 he took >> a tumble, ironically on the Ducati with which 848 Jason DiSalvo had won >> the Daytona 200. A sudden rain shower combined with a slick paint stripe, >> the 848′s quarter-turn throttle stepped the bike out, and down it went. >> [image: image.png] >> It was a low-speed incident; could have happened to anybody. The bike was >> fine, but Cook broke some bones and the long drive back to Vermont gave him >> plenty of time to think. We joked - the 848 was the only Ducati ever >> 'binned' by the only two guys ever to win Daytona on a Ducati; did that >> make the 848 worth more? All joking aside, Cook came to the conclusion >> riding Ducatis on a race track might better be left to others, so he asked >> George Barber for one last ride on Deja Blue. That day come, we all stood >> behind the museum, as Cook watched the Barber staff crank the bike up on >> rollers. Word had spread that this was Cook's last ride, and the space >> began to fill with people important to Cook’s (and Ducati's) past. Paul and >> Maggie Smart, Pierre Terblanche, Nick McCabe (who while at Ducati North >> America worked with Cook on the *Cycle World*“New Blue” project), Alan >> Cathcart, and more... it was a regular Ducati scene. I was surrounded by >> people who understood why this, as David Letterman would say, “was >> something”. The time came to go and Cook never looked back; he rode off, >> past the paint stripe, did his laps and returned the bike to the Barber >> staff. But his eyes, like most of the others were not dry. It was, we all >> knew, the end of an era." >> >> [image: image.png] >> >> >>> 100 Exrtra Points To Vicki For Quoting David Letterman :-) >>> >> >> >> Much Love To All! >> >> Ride Well. >> >> Gabriel >> >>> >>> >>> >>> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >>> From: Jack Ward <jaxn51@gmail.com> >>> To: Ducati Owners Group <ducati@list.ducati.net> >>> Cc: >>> Bcc: >>> Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2021 08:36:07 -0400 >>> Subject: [Ducati] Cook >>> Happy Birthday, Cook! May you have a hundred more. >>> >>> Jack Ward >>> Knoxville, TN >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> All things in moderation (Especially moderation). >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> To get the links and updates on all today's Ducati news: >> http://www.ductalk.com/ >> and >> https://www.facebook.com/ducnet >> _____________________ >> Ducati mailing list -- ducati@list.ducati.net >> To unsubscribe send an email to ducati-leave@list.ducati.net >> Mailto: %(user_address)s > > > > > > To get the links and updates on all today's Ducati news: > http://www.ductalk.com/ > and > https://www.facebook.com/ducnet > _____________________ > Ducati mailing list -- ducati@list.ducati.net > To unsubscribe send an email to ducati-leave@list.ducati.net > Mailto: %(user_address)s