Kelly Moran
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Born | Huntington Beach, California |
September 21, 1960
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Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Huntington Beach, California |
Nickname | JellyMan |
Nationality | United States |
Career history | |
1978-1979 1980 1981-1982 1986-1988 1989-1992 1992 |
Hull Vikings Birmingham Brummies Eastbourne Eagles Sheffield Tigers Belle Vue Aces Swindon Robins |
Individual honours | |
1983, 1984 1984 1985 1986 |
USA National Champion Ventura Raceway Track Champion Bruce Penhall Classic winner US Spring Classic Champion |
Team honours | |
1982, 1990 1984 |
Speedway World Team Cup US Pairs Champion |
Kelly Moran (September 21, 1960 – April 4, 2010)[1] was an American professional speedway rider who rode for a number of British clubs and also represented USA. Kelly's younger brother Shawn Moran was also a successful speedway rider who won the European (World) Under-21 World Championship in 1981 and the Long Track World Championship in 1983.
Career
Moran was known as "Jelly Man" and "the Wizard of Balance" for the way he would hang off his machine when cornering. He arrived in England to race for Hull in 1978 as a teenager, but his season was curtailed when he crashed heavily at the Hackney Wick Stadium and suffered multiple injuries. However, the following year he qualified for his first World Championship Final at the Silesian Stadium in Poland. After finishing equal third with 10 points from his five rides (two wins, two seconds and a third), Moran was involved in a four-way run-off for third and fourth places with England's Michael Lee, Australian Billy Sanders, and defending champion Ole Olsen from Denmark. Lee won the run-off from Moran, Sanders and Olsen.
A dispute over terms saw Kelly make a late start to his British season with Birmingham. But he was on the move again in 1981 when he joined the Eastbourne Eagles where he became a spectacular crowd pleaser. He then qualified for his second World Championship Final in 1982 where he again finished fourth, this time in front of his home crowd at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
Despite experiencing his best ever season in 1982, he decided to remain in California for the next three years. During this period he won back-to-back US National Championships in 1983 and 1984, and qualified for his third and last World Championship Final in 1984 at the Ullevi stadium in Göteborg, Sweden. Once more he finished fourth with 11 points.
In 1986 Kelly joined his younger brother Shawn at the Sheffield Tigers where he had three successful years and helped himself to 1012.5 points at an average of 8.88. He represented his country on several occasions and it was his partnership with Shawn that helped United States team to win the 1982 and 1990 Speedway World Team Cups.
Following Sheffield's closure Kelly moved to the Belle Vue Aces with his brother, where he remained until a dip in form saw him move from Belle Vue to Swindon early in 1992. A broken collar bone interrupted his spell at Swindon, but he struggled for form in a team that was rooted at the foot of the league.[citation needed] He retired from speedway at the end of the season, but he made a brief comeback in 2003 racing in North America. However, his comeback lasted just the one season.
Death
Kelly Moran, a heavy cigarette smoker, died in his home town, Huntington Beach, California, on April 4, 2010 from complications of emphysema.[2] He was 49 years old at the time of his passing.
A public memorial service was held for Kelly Moran on April 10, 2010 at his home track, the Costa Mesa Speedway in Los Angeles, organised by close friend and long time sponsor Peter Rovazzini of Rovazzini Electric. Among those who attended and gave speeches about Kelly were Bruce Penhall, Bobby Schwartz, Dennis Sigalos, Ron Preston, John Cook, and Briggs. Condolence messages sent from Australian rider John Titman and 15 time World Champion Ivan Mauger were read out by those present.[3]
World Final Appearances
- 1979 - Chorzów, Silesian Stadium - 4th - 11pts + 2pts
- 1982 - Los Angeles, Memorial Coliseum - 4th - 11pts
- 1984 - Göteborg, Ullevi - 4th - 11pts
See also
References
- ↑ Oakes, P. (2004), British Speedway Who's Who; ISBN 0-948882-81-6
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Kelly Moran Memorial at Costa Mesa
External links
- Burford, B. (2002) The Moran Brothers ISBN 0-7524-2424-6
- Pages using Infobox Speedway rider with unknown or deprecated parameters
- Articles with unsourced statements from April 2010
- 1960 births
- 2010 deaths
- American speedway riders
- Belle Vue Aces riders
- Birmingham Brummies riders
- Deaths from emphysema
- Eastbourne Eagles riders
- Hull Vikings riders
- Sheffield Tigers riders
- Sportspeople from Huntington Beach, California