TonyMac Posted November 30, 2010 Report Share Posted November 30, 2010 IF you haven't yet bought our big bestselling book of 2010, Michael Lee: Back From The Brink, then have a read of the introductory chapter below. It will hopefully whet your appetite for more... It's a bit more interesting than your average speedway book. INTRODUCTION BACK FROM THE BRINK THE prisoner being driven away from Newmarket Magistrate’s Court in the back of the prison service van was feeling anxious about what would happen next. He had been refused bail and had to accept that he was on his way back to jail, where he’d spent the previous two weeks on remand after being arrested by police and found in possession of an “astronomical amount” of drugs. Soon after the meat-wagon left the court, it reached the main A12 road and looked as if it was about to head back towards Norwich. Michael Lee knew Norwich quite well. He’d spent two previous prison sentences in Norfolk’s capital city for minor drugs offences and was sent back there again, only this time for committing a much more serious crime that would ultimately carry a three-year sentence. By now 40-years-old, he’d lost a lot of weight and was feeling tired, hungry and dejected at being denied bail. He knew he was heading back to his cell. But it soon became clear to him that it wasn’t the familiar one he’d left behind in Norwich that morning. The vehicle slowed at the main junction and turned right. As it did so, he managed to catch sight of one of those familiar green road signs through a tiny window. Alarm bells started ringing in his head. It read: ‘LONDON A12’. “Hey! Where the f*** are we going?” he shouted with panic in his voice. “Where are you taking us now?” The two other prisoners sharing the squalid, cramped conditions with him were equally frightened and confused. Within the next few hours Michael Lee, the 1980 World Champion and one of the greatest speedway riders of his generation, would be arriving through the gates at Brixton prison in South London, one of the most notorious jails in Britain and home to murderers, psychopaths, rapists, paedophiles, armed robbers, junkies and all the other dregs of society. But what was he doing there among the low-life? How had it come to this? Michael had been dubbed a so-called ‘bad boy’ and ‘rebel’ of speedway following a number of high profile brushes with authority that led to a year’s ban from the track and countless other problems that brought about the premature end of a once great racing career. When he fell out of love with speedway in the early 80s and, in his eyes, the sport turned its back on him, he felt isolated and persecuted by officialdom. He needed to replace the thrill of racing a 500cc bike with a new adrenalin buzz, so he turned to a new lifestyle dominated by drugs. Michael literally produced hundreds of his own cannabis plants, took amphetamines and snorted cocaine “by the bucketful” on such a large scale and for so long that he is convinced he would be dead by now if he hadn’t come to his senses in time. He became such a “full-on” cog in the drugs underworld that for a while he made a very lavish living as a drug-dealer, comfortably earning thousands of pounds a week. He loved the lifestyle, the fast cars and the parties – a far cry from his golden days on the track where he was idolised by thousands. But he wasn’t a murderer! And Brixton prison wasn’t for him. So how did it come to this? Following a series of revealing interviews with Michael and members of his close family, friends, team-mates, rivals and others who knew him best, his astonishing story can now be fully told. The King’s Lynn and England legend – one of only six Englishmen to have lifted the world title and twice a World Team Cup winner too – recalls all the exhilarating highs and depressing lows of his turbulent life, on and off the track. It’s been a heck of a rollercoaster journey and, at times, a very painful and emotional one – not only for Mike, but also for his loved ones. Especially his parents, Andy and Valerie, who have seen the best and worst of him for more than 50 years but have stuck by him through it all. With Michael’s soul laid bare, this book can’t have been easy for them to read. But at times it’s been a very rewarding adventure, too, with many highlights to remember along the way. Michael won more races in his first year of racing than many riders have managed in their entire career. He has turned his life around completely through sheer hard work and dedication, his renewed passion for speedway and his mechanical engineering skills, he has established himself as one of the most respected and successful engine tuners in the business, with more than 15 star riders now putting their trust in him to produce the goods. In recent years a couple of respected promoters have recruited him as their Technical Advisor, tapping into his enormous wealth of experience both on the track and in the workshop. In 2010 he was back among the big-time on the Grand Prix circuit. It’s been a remarkable turnaround. When Michael and I first spoke about turning his compelling story into a book, he had it in mind that it would be a straightforward ghosted autobiography, with me putting his thoughts and memories into words. The problem with that limited approach is Michael’s natural humility – he wouldn’t have wanted to dwell on his many achievements as one of Britain’s all-time greats in the way some others like to boast about themselves. One of the things this modest man is not very good at is talking about himself – well, not in a positive way! It’s one of his most endearing qualities that he appears almost embarrassed to recall his finest moments and the countless brilliant things he did on a bike, but record them we must and I hope the biography approach has enabled me, along with the input of numerous others who have contributed, to do full justice to just how good a rider he was from such a very young age. I hope the book will answer questions and provide an insight into a very talented and gifted rider who has divided opinion almost since the day he burst onto the scene as a child prodigy. Michael will always possess strong views, while others also have the right to express theirs. You can make up your own mind. As an authorised account of his life, Michael naturally had the final right of veto on any comments that he didn’t particularly like or agree with – and I’m sure there are opinions voiced by others here that will have made him wince or cringe with embarrassment as he and his partner Nicky proof-read the finished version. But it’s typical of the brutal honesty he has shown throughout this soulsearching process that he didn’t ask me to alter or delete a single negative word written about him from any of the following pages. That takes admirable strength of character and we should respect him all the more for his willingness to accept criticism from others. Probably Michael’s biggest achievement is that he has survived the worst times and is still here to tell the story! Not only that, but he has re-emerged as a much stronger, mature and wiser individual. With the help of certain people and due to the manner in which he has responded to their trust, he has regained his dignity and self-respect and turned his whole life around. When you think how badly out of control his life became after he quit racing, he really has come back from the brink. Tony McDonald http://www.retro-speedway.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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