Nick Ienatsch

Nick Ienatsch (last name pronounced "Eye-Notch", born 1961/62[3] in Eau Claire, Wisconsin) is an American motorcycle racer, writer, and motorcycle riding instructor.

Nick Ienatsch
Born1961/1962 (age 58–59)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationMotorcycle racer, writer, riding instructor
Spouse(s)
Judy Ienatsch (née Perez)
(m. 1997)
[1][2]

Racing

Willow Springs club champion with ARRA 1989/'90

Three-time WERA GNF national champion 1989

Two-time AMA Superteams national champion; 1993 Erion Racing with teammate Tommy Lynch; 1994 Two Brothers Racing with teammate Larry Pegram

Second and third overall in AMA 250GP 1991-1996 with Zero Gravity/Extreme Lean

1991 USGP 250 American wildcard at Laguna Seca

Three-time winner of Willow Springs 24-Hour with Cycle Tune, Vance&Hines, Team Hammer

Dragracing: 2008 AMA/Dragbike World Finals winner in ProStreet on Stotz Racing Honda

Motorcycle schools

Ienatsch was the lead instructor for twelve years at Freddie Spencer Riding School.[1][4] He later created and is lead instructor at Yamaha Champions Riding School.[5]


Writing

Ienatsch has written for Motorcyclist (1984–1993)[6] Sport Rider where he was founding editor (ca. 1985–1996)[1][7] and Cycle World (1997–present).[4][7][8]

He is also author of the 2003 book Sport Riding Techniques.

The Pace was updated in 2013 with The Pace 2.0 cycleworld.com

Ienatsch published a novel in 2018 called The Hill Ranch Racers

Bibliography

  • Nick Ienatsch (2003). Sport Riding Techniques: How To Develop Real World Skills for Speed, Safety, and Confidence on the Street and Track. David Bull Publishing. ISBN 1893618072.

The Hill Ranch Racers Novel (2018)

References

  1. Dean Adams (1998), "Interview: Nasty Nick", Superbike Planet, Hardscrabble Media LLC, archived from the original on September 24, 2015
  2. Nick Ienatsch (April 1999), "The king's ride", Cycle World: 62–69
  3. Glick, Shav (December 7, 1989), "Motor Racing: Off-Road's Second Generation Reaps Honors at Season's Finish", Los Angeles Times
  4. Matthew Miles, Ride Faster. Ride Safer: Cycle World Contributing Editor Nick Ienatsch co-founds new rider-training website
  5. Where Are They Now? Motojournalist/Racer Nick Ienatsch, Superbike Planet, December 16, 2011, archived from the original on January 9, 2012
  6. Nick Ienatsch (November 1991), The Pace: Separating street from track, riding from racing, Motorcyclist
  7. "The Muscle Mile", Cycle World, p. 78, February 1997, Nick Ientasch was the founding editor of Sport Rider magazine. This is his first article for Cycle World.
  8. Author: Nick Ienatsch, Cycle World, retrieved October 31, 2012

Champschool.com

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