with ... Ben Townley
Thursday 05 May:  Adam Wheeler's intuitive interview for Youthstream.  BT101’s GP return on the track at Valkenswaard perhaps didn’t quite turn out to be what he or anyone else was expecting.  
Ben Townley at Saturday's Press Conference in Valkenswaard. Photo courtesy of Adam Wheeler for Youthstream.
	
	
	
	
Off the sand however the New Zealander was a welcome ‘new’ addition to the FIM World Championship paddock.They
 say life moves in cycles and sport is no exception. 
As I sat 
interviewing Ben Townley on the eve of the Dutch MXGP it was difficult 
not to think back to another sunny day at Valkenswaard in 2002 when the 
Kiwi , then seventeen years old and starting his second GP season, was 
on the brink of exploding his career. 
A surprising run to 2nd 
position that day was the first podium of many on the way to the 
distinctions of being the first MX2 World Champ in 2004 and first ever 
winner of MX2 and MX2 GPs (2005), AMA East Coast Lites Champ (2007) and MX 
Lites runner-up (2007). After that it generally got a bit messy.
My first sit-down with BT was in 2001, his first term in Europe and he 
came across exactly as he was, a young kid, far away from home and his 
family, disorientated, knackered and with not much to say for himself. 
In 2002, just after his emergence in the Dutch sand, he proved that he 
was quickly getting to grips with the game, and not just with his 
actions on the bike. I was quite shocked with the confidence surge in 
Townley and this helped him reveal his personality; the same character, 
intelligence, openness and friendliness that has kept his name at the 
top of the motocross tree despite the wilderness of the recent injury 
years.   
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
BT in 2002:  "I'm learning from better racing 'company' and also from trial and 
error, what things during the race actually work and what things might 
lose me time. If you are up there with the leaders it is much easier to 
ride your own race whereas if you are down in the pack you have to be 
more on the limit and concentrate a lot more. To come
 to Europe and have to leave my family, yes, that is a big thing but I'm
 doing something I've always wanted and I´ll give it my best shot. You 
have to concentrate on the positives; it's easier than I imagined 
actually."
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
Nine years on and with wife Lucy and fourteen month old son Levi in tow 
Townley gives the impression of an ‘old-hand’ at Valkenswaard. If his 
memory banks were trying recall the best way to tackle the punishing 
ripples of the terrain (and the track was run the other way for his last
 appearance in 2004 when he won the MX2 GP) then he showed no 
apprehension. As an interviewee he remains engaging, thinks about his 
answers, varies his vocabulary and tries to avoid clichés – these 
attributes already mark him out from his peers. 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
BT: "I don’t feel old physically and mentally but the last time I was 
sitting at Valkenswaard in a GP paddock I was nineteen. That’s a long time ago now. I haven’t done what I wanted to in that 
time. I had a European phase, an American phase, a wishy-washy phase and
 now I am back in Europe and I want to create a solid chapter. I am not 
looking too far into the future and especially not past here in Europe. I
 need to get myself back on my feet and that involves not looking too 
far ahead."
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
After the first moto on Monday where he visibly struggled, Ben is now 
being forced to look ahead by opting to sit out events in the USA (where
 he won a moto in 2010) and Brazil: 
	
	
	
	
BT: "It was nice to be back at the race 
and be with my team but overall it was a disaster! I felt good on the 
bike last week but it was a completely different story here. It was so rough out there. I felt so weak half way through 
the moto. I didn’t think it would be so hard. I need some more time to 
build back up. In terms of speed I could have gone faster but I don’t 
have the condition to sustain it." 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
The 2011 MX1 title shot vanished with that broken jaw and concussion at 
the start of the year but Townley retains the ability and 
professionalism to have a say in the destination of this season’s crown.
 Even if he can’t be ‘re-born’ as a GP star over the coming months the 
World Championship community is richer and a little bit more interesting
 for his viewpoints, opinions and presence.