Herb.....It's a clubs democratic right to do whatever they want at their own race meetings, I have no problems with that. However, for the life of me I can't understand the reasoning behind this decision. In my forty odd years of interest in dirt track as a spectator, participant, meeting director, scrutineer and everything else in between I've seen hardly any safety situations involving sliders and chookies that warrant even the slightest intervention. To seperate the two into seperate classes goes against the proud traditions of dirt track and seems to me to be a massive attack of over reaction to a "problem" that doesn't really exist. Sliders and chookies have raced together with not a hint of trouble since the early sixties so what was the reasoning that prompted this decision? I'd really like to know.
If I owned a 250 or 125 slider I'd be pretty pissed off if there wasn't enough of them at the meeting to form a class and I was forced to ride in an "all in" slider class with 500 class bikes. Not only would I be being deprived of any chance of being competitive, I'd also be thrown into a far more dangerous situation than the original percieved problem due to the huge performance differential between 125/250 sliders and the big Jawas and Japs.
I know it's a difficult job trying to keep everybody happy but I suspect that changing fifty year old traditions to please a small minority is going to upset more people than it helps. I honestly think that this is a retrograde decision that hasn't been properly thought out.