The Isle of Man TT is my favourite annual rabbit hole and with race week approaching, I got completely lost in all media TT again. That’s when I stumbled over this one and immediately jumped right in. John McGuinness is one of those legends, who’d shun you for calling him that. He doesn’t really seem to love the limelight but is way too good at racing supersport bikes on narrow roads up a damn mountain, all the while avoiding hedges, lampposts, walls and whatever wildlife the sweeper guy racing at #1 didn’t scare away yet.
What I truly love about all those crazy, talented athletes is that they have such a tangible respect for each other – the way each and everyone talks about his fellow racers is full of praise and compassion and somehow always on eye-level. John McGuinness however seems to take this to extremes the way he shares his stories about other riders, his interactions with them and how they helped shape him into the man he is.
One especially emotional chapter for me was the one he told the stories with Joey Dunlop, the pure admiration and the emotional turmoil felt so real, I noticed myself tearing up on my way to work.
If you’re into motorbikes that go very fast on regular streets and don’t want to deal with massive egos along the way, dip your feet into the TT world. These guys are mad, but they’re also somehow … so normal?
I love it. Loved the way it dragged me in, loved the way it told more of the man they called King of the Mountain after Joey, and properly introduced me to a racer I might just have less of a connection to, just from hearing him in his interviews.