BRAD OXLEY
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Steve Virgen
If speedway were comparable to basketball, Brad Oxley would be known
as a gym rat.
Perhaps, people should call him a dirt dog. However, more
appropriately, everyone knows him as, “Rad Brad.”
Oxley has been a icon of sorts at the Costa Mesa Speedway, where
he has grown up since age 10. He went from working in different jobs,
such as selling popcorn and programs, to actually racing in the
motorcycle events. He went from gopher boy to hero in a matter of six
years.
Oxley said he admired the riders he came to know throughout his
childhood and he decided at a young age that saddling motorcycles
amid wild conditions would be something he would want to do for the
better part of his life.
When Oxley turned 16, he started to compete in speedway. He had
started racing in other events when he was 14.
“I didn’t want to be a champion, I just wanted to be a rider,”
Oxley said of his ambition at a young age.
In 1987, Oxley did become a champion. He won the speedway national
championship. It was the 14th national speedway event he had competed
in.
“I was really in my prime,” Oxley said. “It wasn’t like I claimed
it because of talent. I had to hang in there and keep working at it.”
Oxley described his first national championship as a bit
controversial. Oxley and Bobby Ott ended that fateful night in 1987
in a tie in points, which are accumulated for winning races during
the event. They would have to compete in a run-off, one race that
would decide the champion.
Ott was said to be favored, as he was known for his speed. But his
bike caught some traction and he fell. Oxley went on to win the
championship. He has also won several seasonal events.
“[Ott] was faster than me,” Oxley said. “He was the opposite of
me. He was the natural and super talent. I was more of the worker,
the guy who had to work for what he got. He had me beat that night if
he wouldn’t have over-cooked it.”
Oxley won the national title again in 1999 and brought pride to
the Oxleys, who have been a fixture of the Costa Mesa Speedway, which
came about in 1969. Brad’s father, Harry, worked for the renowned
Jack Milne and became fascinated with motorcycles and speedway.
Harry Oxley and Milne, the 1937 World Speedway champion, promoted
speedway events in Van Nuys in the late 1960s and then found what
they were looking for in Costa Mesa.
“He’s the godfather of speedway,” Brad Oxley said of his father.
“He’s the one that has made all that is here at the Costa Mesa
Speedway possible.”
These days, Brad Oxley, 43, works as a promoter for speedway.
Oxley, the latest honoree of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
lives in San Clemente with his wife, Jaleen. They have three boys and
two girls.
When Oxley thinks back to his many racing highlights, the two
national titles come to mind. Yet Oxley also treasures the everyday
work that went into preparing for races.
“The beauty of speedway was that we were racing five nights a
week,” Oxley said. “There were many chances to win.”
For two years, Oxley competed in Europe. He was the London Riders
champion and the British Speedway League Rookie of the Year in 1981.
Throughout his life, Oxley is thankful for the relationships that
were formed through racing. He is also grateful that he was able to
overcome several injuries.
“Broken arms? I had three or four of those,” Oxley said. “It’s
about the same injuries you get playing football. You tweak your
neck. You get concussions. All that stuff takes its toll. By the
nature of speedway there really isn’t anything courteous to it. You
have to take advantage of your opportunities and be aggressive. The
competition is really tight. It’s exciting.”
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