
The motorcycle speedway community is mourning the loss of iconic racers Ryan Terry-Daley and Nick Edmond, who tragically died in separate incidents in the past week.
Both riders were well-respected in their disciplines and were affiliated with Auckland鈥檚 Rosebank Speedway. It鈥檚 understood Terry-Daley, 31, died in a car crash near Auckland over the weekend, while Edmonds was in his 50s and was involved in an accident.
Terry-Daley was a two-time North Island solo champion and three-time New Zealand champion and spent some time competing in the lower levels in the UK. Upon returning to New Zealand, he helped and mentored many of the up-and-coming riders and won the Rosebank Speedway club champs last year by a significant margin.
Interim general manager of Speedway New Zealand, Zoe Irons, described Terry-Daley as a 鈥渞eally good human鈥.
鈥淗e really enjoyed his racing,鈥 Irons said. 鈥淗e enjoyed every part of it from the mechanical aspect of it to the racing part of it.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a cool concept, isn鈥檛 it? Racing a bike for a living. If that鈥檚 your passion, it鈥檚 an amazing thing to be able to go and do it for a job, but you have to be fearless because these bikes have got no brakes. They accelerate as fast as a Formula One car because of their power-to-weight ratio.
Ryan Terry-Daley. Photo / Rosebank Speedway
鈥淗e got to live his dream out. He was a good human and just such a likeable lad.鈥
British Speedway also paid its respects to Terry-Daley.
鈥淩yan was a regular in the UK for around a decade, racing predominantly in the NDL [third division] for the likes of Mildenhall, Coventry, Stoke, Plymouth and Leicester,鈥 it said in a statement.
鈥淗is spell with the Lion Cubs in 2019 saw him part of the team which lifted the NDL title, and although he was no longer racing in the UK, he continued to compete in New Zealand.
鈥淥ur thoughts are with his family and friends at this very sad time.鈥
Edmonds was considered a legend in sidecar racing, which took him around the world, competing in England, Europe, the USA and Australia, even representing New Zealand at the World F茅d茅ration Internationale de Motocyclisme level.
Rosebank Speedway president Brian Guptill said Edmonds was somebody very passionate about the sport.
鈥淎fter all this time on sidecars, he was in the process of putting a flat-track bike together to come out racing this season on a flat-track bike,鈥 Guptill said.
Nick Edmonds. Photo / Rosebank Speedway
鈥淗e would spend 30 hours a week plus helping another ... competitor to get their sidecar ready for the season.
鈥淣ick was awesome with his New Zealand titles and everything else that he did.鈥
The Rosebank Speedway, which recently had its lease extended by five years, with the option for a further five, will use its first meet of the season on October 19 to pay its respects to Terry-Daley, while plans are in place to honour Edmonds in early November.
Last month, the speedway community also lost Alan 鈥淢oon Goon鈥 Luoni, who had an involvement of over 45 years in the sport, mainly in Whanganui.
is an Auckland-based reporter for the New Zealand Herald who covers breaking sports news.
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