Home  Contact Us Articles
Books - DVDs Stadia Pix Programme Generator
08/02/2026
The Ghost Race
Your Feedback
 
07/12/2025
DVD Review: Speedway '74
Your Feedback
 
01/12/2025
Book Review: Stamford Bridge
 
09/11/2025
Cheating
Ten English World Champions
Your Feedback
 
26/10/2025
The Hydroscand Arena
Your Feedback
 
12/10/2025
The Slice of Lucky Pie
Your Feedback
 
05/10/2025
An Old Chestnut
Your Feedback
 
21/09/2025
Poole Stadium in 2025
Your Feedback
 
13/09/2025
Leigh Adams
Your Feedback
 
17/08/2025
Boulger's Wembley Woes
Your Feedback
 
03/08/2025
Terry Betts Mural
Your Feedback
 
20/07/2025
E.W.Raceway - 2005 vs 2025
Your Feedback
 
13/07/2025
DVD Review: Speedway 73
Your Feedback
 
06/07/2025
Book Review: Price & Kitchen
Your Feedback
 
15/06/2025
The World Team Cup
Your Feedback
 
08/06/2025
To GP or not to GP
Your Feedback
 
04/05/2025
My Michanek Mystery
 
27/04/2025
Book Review: Harringay
 
13/04/2025
Hans Nielsen V Erik Gundersen
Your Feedback
 
23/02/2025
King Cinder Rides Again
Your Feedback
 
09/02/2025
A Tribute to Len Silver
Plus Points
Your Feedback
 
06/10/2024
The Triple Crown 'Plus.'
Your Feedback
 
22/09/2024
More Memories
Dream Team: Norman Johns
Your Feedback
 
01/09/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 8: Eric Boocock
Your Feedback
 
25/08/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 7: Phil Crump
Your Feedback
 
18/08/2024
Book Review: Hampden to Workington
 
21/07/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 6: John Louis and John Davis
Rose Tinted Spectacles
 
14/07/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 5: Chris Morton
Your Feedback
 
23/06/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 4: Dave Jessup
Your Feedback
 
16/06/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 3: Malcolm Simmons
Your Feedback
 
02/06/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 2: Ray Wilson
Your Feedback
 
26/05/2024
Ivan Mauger V Britain's Best
Part 1:Nigel Boocock
Your Feedback
 
06/05/2024
Silver Machine Win Gold
Ivan's Fantasy Island
Your Feedback
 
02/04/2024
Tidying Up The Parade
NZ v Australia 1980
Your Feedback
 
24/03/2024
2024 is Off and Running
The Story of Noddy Holder
Your Feedback
 
28/01/2024
1975/76 NZ v England
Your Feedback
 
17/12/2023
DVD: Great Races of the 80s
What's Wrong With Ambition?
Your Feedback
 
29/10/2023
Book Review: Walthamstow
When the Rangers Roared
High Beech Revival of 1954
Your Feedback
 
16/10/2023
Western Springs Winged Wheels
Grand Pricks?
Your Feedback
 
01/10/2023
Blind Speedway Rider
Track Pix: Oxford
Farcical Guest
Your Feedback
 
17/09/2023
The Ole Olsen Tapes
Dream Team: Richard Cleaver
Plus Points
Your Feedback
 
23/07/2023
1974/75 BL V New Zealand
Heat Details Required
Your Feedback


The Ghost Race
By David Pickles

Aub Lawson
Picture courtesy of John Chaplin

A bit of unique history here, from the very peak of the "Golden Age" of speedway, 1948 - when crowds were measured in the tens of thousands every week. The two clubs featured here, West Ham and New Cross got weekly crowds of around 45-50,000 and 25-30,000 respectively each Tuesday/Wednesday during the season.

During the post-war years it was often debated about which was the "fastest track on average". All tracks had different lengths of course, like now, but there was often fierce debate about it at West Ham and New Cross as they represented the biggest track in the UK, West Ham, and the smallest, New Cross.

West Ham at the time was a massive 440 yds - quarter of a mile - and New Cross was known as "The Frying Pan" at just 262 yds. The interest was that if a lone rider did four laps at each track at exactly the same time and the times taken, then divided by the yardage and allowing for differing track conditions which track would prove to be the fastest? On Wednesday 24th March 1948 that debate was finally about to be settled, and it would be settled in a live broadcast on the BBC Light Programme (now Radio 2). This was during the days when the BBC would broadcast a live speedway meeting each week on the radio which would draw an audience of up to a million listeners. That gives the modern day reader some idea of just how massive a sport speedway was in the post-war years. .

Aub Lawson lined up at the starting gate at the gigantic Custom House arena and Ron Johnson, the "King" of New Cross did the same down the Old Kent Road. The BBC sent Raymond Glendenning to be the compere of the "race", and various technical boffins were in attendance at both tracks to set up the timing equipment, measure the depth and dampness of each track and calculate the official respective speeds.

Both riders lined up at their respective gates and with a time signal from the BBC studio which set the tapes to rise, they both dropped the clutch and were away.

The "winner" of the theoretical race was Aub Lawson in a time of around 75 secs, Johnson pencilling in around 60. When everything was taken into account, not least the length of the tracks it was judged that Lawson was indeed on the "fastest" track out of the two. In no small measure this was helped by the long majestic straights at Custom House and the wide sweeping bends, whereas the much smaller New Cross track was more technical and difficult to negotiate, even though on the surface lap times were much quicker.

West Ham and New Cross were fierce rivals, almost literally over the river from each other. The West Ham fans often derided the New Cross track as being too tight and technical and said that Custom House was faster and "for the purist", whereas the Old Kent Rd faithful thought the West Ham track too big and "boring", even though of course both tracks had things in their favour and against them. New Cross at the time was promoted by one Freddie Mockford who invented the starting gate back in 1933, and ironically it was him that wound up top flight league speedway at New Cross midway through the 1953 season with the oft quoted famous sentence "I'm sorry but Division One speedway has to come to a sudden end here at New Cross as we cannot sustain the business with crowds of just 13,000 each week".

Laughable today and promoters would bite their own hands off for that sort of attendance, but it shows you how different things are now. West Ham closed in 1955, reopened in 1964 until 1971 and ran for just 6 weeks in the second division as Romford Bombers in 1972. New Cross reopened in 1959 and ran in 1960, reopening in 1963 until closing again mid-season and that was the end of the bikes for good down the Old Kent Road.

Both sites are long gone now of course, West Ham being a huge housing estate, and New Cross literally a public park, although careful examination of some of it can still reveal the outline of a couple of the bends and old terrace. A trip between the current Millwall Den and the railway near where the Old Den was will locate it.

Back in 1948 London ran top flight speedway every night of the week, Wimbledon Monday, West Ham Tuesday, New Cross Wednesday, Wembley Thursday and Harringay Friday.

Oh how lucky those supporters were - if only they but knew it!

 

This article was first published on 8th February 2026

[ Use Mobile Version ]

 

Submit a Comment on this Article

Email us: speedwayplus@hotmail.com

X/Twitter: @_speedwayplus_

Go Back to Main Menu

   Please leave your comments on this article (email address will not be published)