VILAS COUNTY
NEWS-REVIEW
and
2013
AMSOIL World Championship
Souvenir Section
The Three Lakes News
50th Derby vcnewsreview.com • 715-479-4421
EAGLE RIVER, WI 54521
JANUARY 2013
Pioneering rally on Dollar Lake becomes world’s top snomo race ___________ BY GARY RIDDERBUSCH NEWS-REVIEW EDITOR
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Few if any could have imagined that the first snowmobile Derby run on Dollar Lake 50 years ago would evolve into the most premier snowmobile racing spectacle in the world, but visionaries in Eagle River made it happen. What began as a novel Sunday afternoon rally and a casual racing atmosphere at the infancy of recreational snowmobiling soon turned into a highly competitive, professional race for the top drivers from the United States and Canada. Since the first Derby in February of 1964, snowmobile racing has undergone dramatic changes in machinery, race tracks, sponsorship and spectator support. And while the snowmobile industry has had its ups and downs, it has been no wavering fact that the Eagle River World Championship Snowmobile Derby is the “granddaddy of them all.” Not only do the top drivers from throughout the United State and Canada set their sights on Eagle River each January, but manufacturers, sponsors, spectators and the media have focused on the Derby as the major snowmobile racing event of the year for the past 50 years. Today, the race is billed as the AMSOIL World Championship Snowmobile Derby due
The Eagle River Derby has survived 50 years of snowmobile development, weather challenges and a varying economy. Today, thousands of fans attend the AMSOIL
to the sponsorship of the AMSOIL company. However, that hasn’t changed the prestige of winning at Eagle River. But the Derby had a humble beginning on Dollar Lake
This was a scene at the Eagle River Derby in the late 1960s, when dozens of manufacturers were building snowmobiles.
near Chanticleer Inn east of Eagle River. Chanticleer Inn owner John Alward, his wife, Betty, and Walter Goldsworthy of Three Lakes decided the winter economy needed a boost. With the help of the Eagle River Rotary Club, they coordinated a one-day racing schedule that included an obstacle course, cross-country race and 1-mile runs against the clock in heats of five machines. The Eagle River Lions Club ran the concession stand for about 1,000 spectators who showed up to watch the first Derby. The classes were divided into under 9-horsepower and over 9-horsepower. The winner of the over 9-horsepower class was 13-year-old Stan Hayes of Crandon, driving a 16-horsepower Polaris. Hayes is now billed as the first world champion, even though the term World Championship Derby didn’t surface until 1966. John Alward, Goldsworthy
World Championship Snowmobile Derby to watch the best racers from the United States and Canada compete for the title. —NEWS-REVIEW PHOTOS
and the Eagle River Lions Club also coordinated the 1965 Derby on Dollar Lake, billed as the National Derby. An estimated 5,000 spectators watched as George Gensler of Three Lakes recorded the fastest time in the cross-country portion of the race and was named the overall champion on an Evinrude. Big changes occurred in 1966, when the race site was moved by the Lions Club from Dollar Lake to the existing site north of Eagle River. Built there were a 4.2-mile crosscountry course near Pleasure Island Road and a quartermile oval in a natural bowl. Drivers qualified for the World Championship race on the cross-country course, with the final consisting of 10 laps around the snow-covered oval. Steve Ave of Hurley captured the first official world champion title aboard a Ski-Doo. It also was in 1966 that the Wisconsin Legislature certiTo PIONEERS, Pg. 3
The Derby got new life after the race and track were purchased by the Decker family in 1985.
Biggest spectacle in snowmobile racing to celebrate 50th anniversary Jan. 17-20 Past champs, queens to return for 2013 Eagle River Derby ___________ BY GARY RIDDERBUSCH NEWS-REVIEW EDITOR
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The most notable snowmobile racing event in the world will return to Eagle River Jan. 17-20 as the 50th annual AMSOIL World Championship Snowmobile Derby will take center stage. About 30,000 spectators are expected to attend, along with hundreds of racers for four days of racing action and festivities tied to the 50th anniversary of the event. AMSOIL Derby Track owner Chuck Decker said officials are gearing up for an exciting four days at the most famous track in snowmobiling. The festivities will include a full race schedule on the ice oval and on the Sno-Cross course, including the popular Parts Unlimited Friday Night Thunder. There also will be visits by past champions and Derby
royalty. Decker said the 2013 anniversary Derby will have 29 of the 34 past world champions returning to “meet and greet” their fans. “And 25 to 30 of their actual winning sleds or detailed replicas will be here to be seen both on display and on the racetrack that made them famous,” said Decker. Some of the fan favorites committed to returning include Mike Trapp, Jacques Villeneuve, Bobby Donahue, Dave Wahl and Decker, who was himself a world champion in 1987. “Never again in your lifetime will a list of names this famous in snowmobile racing be in one place and at one time,” said Decker. “So make your plans and come out and see these great To SPECTACLE, Pg. 4
The AMSOIL World Championship Snowmoible Derby has evolved into the grandest show in snowmobile racing with the
addition of Sno-Cross racing and Parts Unlimited Friday Night Thunder under the lights. —NEWS-REVIEW PHOTO