Nick Ienatsch

Nick Ienatsch
Born 1961/1962 (age 54–55)
Eau Claire, Wisconsin
Nationality American
Occupation Motorcycle racer, writer, riding instructor
Spouse(s) Judy Ienatsch (née Perez) (m. 1997)[1][2]

Nick Ienatsch (born 1961/62[3] in Eau Claire, Wisconsin) is an American motorcycle racer, writer, and motorcycle riding instructor.

Racing

He was a competitor in several American Road Racing Association classes,[3] Motorcycle Grand Prix racing (see 1991 United States motorcycle Grand Prix) and in AMA 250 Grand Prix class.[4]

Motorcycle schools

Ienatsch was the lead instructor for twelve years at Freddie Spencer Riding School.[1][5] He later created and was lead instructor at Yamaha Champions Riding School.[6]

Writing

Ienatsch has written for Motorcyclist (1984–??)[7] Sport Rider where he was founding editor (ca. 1985–1996)[1][8] and Cycle World (1997–2012).[5][8][9] He is also author of the 2003 book Sport Riding Techniques.

In 2011, he launched the subscription website fastersafer.com with fellow YCRS instructor Ken Hill.[10]

In 2016, he became a contributing author at BikeMinds.com.[11]

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 Dean Adams (1998), "Interview: Nasty Nick", Superbike Planet, Hardscrabble Media LLC
  2. Nick Ienatsch (Apr 1999), "The king's ride", Cycle World: 62–69
  3. 1 2 Glick, Shav (December 7, 1989), "Motor Racing: Off-Road's Second Generation Reaps Honors at Season's Finish", Los Angeles Times
  4. AMA 250 Grand Prix Winners from 1977 to 1996, The Auto Channel, retrieved November 24, 2012
  5. 1 2 Matthew Miles, Ride Faster. Ride Safer: Cycle World Contributing Editor Nick Ienatsch co-founds new rider-training website
  6. Where Are They Now? Motojournalist/Racer Nick Ienatsch, Superbike Planet, December 16, 2011
  7. Nick Ienatsch (November 1991), The Pace: Separating street from track, riding from racing, Motorcyclist
  8. 1 2 "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.
  9. Author: Nick Ienatsch, Cycle World, retrieved October 31, 2012
  10. "Ride faster. Ride safer. Feature Cycle World contributing editor Nick Ienatsch co-founds new rider-training website", Press release, fastersafer.com
  11. What To Talk About When You Talk About Riding
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.