
On the morning of May 7, during the first Superbike qualifying session of the North West 200, Kamil Holan, then 48 years old, crashed at Station Corner. Almost everything that was significant about him is concealed by that one sentence, which has been repeated in motorsport headlines for the last week. In road racing, 48 is not a youthful age. Additionally, it is not very old. It seems from reading the accolades coming from Belgium, the Isle of Man, and Prague that Holan’s age was never really the focus. He was the type of rider whose character came first, followed by his accomplishments.
The racer from the Czech Republic had been leading two lives, or perhaps one life that had been meticulously cut in half. He worked as an art director and graphic designer during the day in Prague, first at Lidě noviny*, one of the oldest daily newspapers in the nation, and subsequently at the media conglomerate CNC. He was precise, the kind of art director who worried where a column inch landed, according to colleagues. According to Vojtěch Gibě, he was “an outstanding colleague.” Outstanding is an unglamorous adjective used to describe someone who arrived early and remained late. On weekends, however, he would line up in Hořice, Brno, and eventually the rugged, hedge-lined sections of the Triangle Circuit in Northern Ireland while wearing leather.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Kamil Holan |
| Age at Death | 48 |
| Nationality | Czech |
| Hometown | Prague, Czech Republic |
| Profession | Motorcycle road racer; Art Director / Graphic Designer |
| Day Job | Former Art Director at Lidové noviny*; later worked at CNC |
| Partner | Zaneta |
| Children | Three daughters |
| Father | Ivo Holan (died two weeks before Kamil) |
| Racing Team | Hefty74 |
| Biggest Win | 2012 Manx Grand Prix Newcomers ‘A’ Race (first Czech rider ever to win at MGP) |
| Notable Events | Isle of Man TT (2015–2018), Ulster Grand Prix, Macau Grand Prix, North West 200 |
| Best TT Finish | 20th, 2018 Superbike Race |
| Best MGP Finish | 5th, 2014 Senior Manx Grand Prix |
| Home Circuit | Hořice, Czech Republic |
| Date of Death | 7 May 2026 |
| Location of Accident | Station Corner, Triangle Circuit, North West 200, Northern Ireland |
What he accomplished is even more intriguing because he began later than the majority of his competitors. Holan was the first rider from the Czech Republic to win the Newcomers ‘A’ event at the Manx Grand Prix in 2012. He finished fifth at the Senior Manx Grand Prix two years later. He competed at the Isle of Man TT from 2015 to 2018, placing 20th in the 2018 Superbike. In a sport where the biggest names are often Northern Irish or English, none of these figures are particularly noteworthy, but the ascent was impressive for a man who had not been raised in the road racing pipeline and who came from a nation with no real tradition in this sport. The only sort he appeared at ease with was quiet and impressive.
The timing of all of this is difficult to ignore. Holan’s father, Ivo, passed away two weeks before to the North West 200. Ivo, the man who traveled to paddocks and racetracks around Europe to see his son compete, had by all accounts been his biggest supporter. In its statement, the Manx Motor Cycle Club specifically named him and described the scene as “cruel irony.” Still, Holan traveled to Northern Ireland. Laurent Hoffmann, a Belgian rider who knew Holan well, claimed that he was competing as a memorial to his father. When you read it, that detail weighs heavily. He was able to remain at home. He selected the bike.
The tribute that endures is Hoffmann’s. The Belgian said, “He was genuine, friendly, and always kind.” “A great rider and a decent man with a nice heart. He was the greatest man, and I couldn’t say anything negative about him.” The bond is explained by the fact that Hoffmann’s wife is Czech, and Hoffmann even used his truck to transport some of Holan’s equipment from Europe. In the paddock, the two had been arranged next to one another. That image neighbors at an awning, exchanging equipment, organizing a weekend has an almost home quality that makes the loss more difficult to comprehend.
On Facebook, his group, Hefty74, described him as “a wonderful friend and a man of great character.” Words like passion and humility appeared frequently. In their own homage, Raul Torras Martinez’s former team, Toll Racing, drew a distinction between their deceased rider and Holan in a way that only those involved in the sport can comprehend: a devotion that may put one’s life in danger for a little moment of freedom. That framing usually lands uncomfortably outside of motorsports. It’s just the reality of the situation within.
Holan was the 20th person to die in the North West 200 in its 97-year existence and the first since Malachi Mitchell Thomas in 2016. In a way, the numbers seem both significant and unimportant. After his family gave their okay, the event proceeded, with practice sessions continuing into the evening and the show continuing since that’s what road racing does. That continuation has a tense quality. It’s considered noble by some. Some find it unsettling. Each response makes sense.
What’s left is a 48-year-old Prague-based art director with three daughters and a partner named Zaneta. He won a race in 2012 that had never been won by a Czech rider before, and he returned to Northern Ireland in May because his father had recently passed away and the bikes were the only thing that he and Ivo had really spoken about. Kamil and Ivo, rest in peace, the Manx Club wrote. It’s the type of finale that nobody wanted, written too soon, and, for some reason, the kind of narrative that road racing consistently produces.
i) https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/sport/motorcycling/kamil-holan-48-named-as-rider-who-died-in-north-west-200-tragedy/a/151229784.html
ii) https://www.belfastlive.co.uk/sport/other-sport/motorsport/kamil-holan-nw200-tributes-paid-33914540
iii) https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/motorsport/articles/c8d843019p0o