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Harry Leary

Harry Leary
Personal information
Full nameHarry Clarence Leary Jr.
Nickname"Scary Harry Leary", "Turbo"
Born(1959-02-22)February 22, 1959[1]
Lynwood, California, U.S.
DiedSeptember 7, 2024(2024-09-07) (aged 65)
Arizona, U.S.
Height1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)
Weight76 kg (168 lb)
Team information
Current teamPeak Performance Institute BioLab Sciences
DisciplineBicycle Motocross (BMX)
RoleRacer/Team Manager
Rider typeOff Road
Amateur teams
1974–1975Coates Schwinn Bike Shop
1976–1977JMC Racing Equipment
2007Reclassed to Amateur
2007–2024GHP/Applied BMX Training
Professional teams
1977–1980JMC Racing Equipment
1980–1992DiamondBack
1992SE Racing
1993–1995Balance Sports
1995–2000Leary Dirtwerx
2001–2003Marzocchi
2003Specialized
2003–2005Cutting Edge
2006–2007SPR Schwinn
2007–2015GHP
2015–2020BOX/THRILL
2020–2024Peak Performance Institute BioLab Sciences
Major wins
1986 Porsche Design Pro Series

Harry Clarence Leary Jr. (February 22, 1959 – September 7, 2024) was an American professional bicycle motocross (BMX) racer.

Biography

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Leary started racing on July 30, 1974, aged 15.[2] He turned professional in 1977, aged 18, as a founding member of the Professional Racing Organization (PRO) racers guild.[3] His prime competitive years were from 1978 to 1985. He officially retired from BMX Senior pro ("AA" in the ABA and "A" (Elite Men) in the NBL) racing in 1989, and for the previous three years he was largely inactive and served as Diamond Back's factory team manager. He came out of "retirement" in the early 1990s to race in the ABA's Veteran Pro class. In 2007 he ended his professional career and reclassified himself as an amateur, aged 48.

Leary's career was plagued by many injuries, in particular his knees which cut many promising seasons off and required surgery. Also, he had trouble dealing with the fame, as limited to the BMX world as it was, that his career brought. He went as far as to attend a sports medicine clinic for stress management in July 1984.[4] He met many stars of the more established sports at the facility. The stresses that come with the burden of fame was and is a widespread if little discussed aspect in the career of a top amateur or professional athlete.

Perhaps despite his attendance of the clinic, Harry Leary could never really get the psychological aspect of the sport, similar to Tommy Brackens but even more so. In addition, while Tommy had a problem with attitude but remained physically healthy for the vast majority of his career, Harry had both mental attitude and physical injury to contend with. His physical misfortunes often happened when he was on a streak of doing well, cutting promising seasons off, perhaps a No. 1 season.

Awards

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He never won a major title as a top amateur or professional, his biggest win being the $5000 first place award at the 1982 Murray World Cup. He won a measure of redemption when he won back to back ABA Veteran Pro No. 1's in 1993 & 1994 against many of his 1980s peers. He later raced well into his 40s in The Veterans Pro class (which is similar in concept to golf's Champions Tour). In October 2007 he reclassified as an amateur and 30 years of professional racing came to an end. He raced in the 56 & Over Expert Class.[5] He raced as recently the ABA So. Cal. Nationals on February 16, 2008, in 36 & Over Expert Class coming 7th place in an eight-man main in that 20" division but first place in the 24" 46-50 Cruiser Class.[6]

Significant injuries

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Racing habits and traits

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Leary had a reputation of being as, Snap BMX Magazine put it, "High Strung", i.e. having a volatile temper.[13] He was nicknamed "Scary Harry Leary", and later "Turbo"; the former was for his aggressive racing style,[14] the latter was a moniker coined by Bicycle Motocross Action magazine when he "Turboed" himself into finishing National No. 2 in both the American Bicycle Association (ABA) and the National Bicycle League (NBL) in 1981 after being relatively far back in the national standings during that year.

He was the first BMX racer to have his signature physically printed on a BMX bicycle, the Harry Leary Turbo.[15]

Death

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Leary died of heat exhaustion in Arizona, on September 7, 2024, at the age of 65.[16]

BMX magazine and general media interviews and articles

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Notes

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  1. ^ BMX Plus! July 1980 Vol.3 No.7 pg.81
  2. ^ BMX Plus! 1988 Calendar.
  3. ^ BMX Action December 1986 Vol.11 No.12 pg. 30
  4. ^ Super BMX November 1984 Vol.11 No.11 pg.5
  5. ^ VintageBMX topic Harry Leary Reclassed To Amateur[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ ababmx.com So. Cal Nationals results (Day 1). Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ BMX Plus! December 1982 Vol.5 No.12 pg.19
  8. ^ BMX Action December 1982 Vol.7 No.12 pg.77
  9. ^ BMX Plus! February 1983 Vol.6 No.2 pg.13
  10. ^ Super BMX June 1983 Vol.10 No.6 pg.27
  11. ^ BMX Action May 1984 Vol.9 No.5 pg.18
  12. ^ BMX Plus! October 1988 Vol.11 No.10 pg.34
  13. ^ Snap BMX Magazine September/October 1996 Vol.3 Iss.5 No.12 pg.42
  14. ^ BMX Action Bike October/November 1982 Issue 4 pg.37
  15. ^ BMX Action Bike October/November 1982 Iss.4 pg.36
  16. ^ San Juan, Eric (September 16, 2024). "Harry Leary (1959–2024), Hall of Fame BMX racer". Legacy.com. Retrieved September 16, 2024.
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